Do This Right Now!!!
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I'm really sorry, Kris. Hope it actually turns out to be recoverable.
So if we're speaking of Backups. I've become reliant on Apple TimeMachine. I hope it works in the end. (I do have some drives of old archives that need sorting though, TimeMachine is only everything on my main machine going back a year.)
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i'm sorry to hear this!
I don't know, what software you are using to recover the data, but normally it should be possible to recover everything if it is "only" formatted and not overwritten with new data.
I had good experiences with GetDataBack
http://www.runtime.org/data-recovery-software.htmGood luck!
And yes, you're right: backup, backup, backup!!!
Last year one of my external HDDs (1TB!) died because off a corrupted usb-chip (btw. stay away from the newer Western Digital external 2,5" HDDs! They have no SATA interface anymore, but an usb connector directly soldered on the board and the data stream is encrypted - no chance to plug it on a SATA cable if the usb chip fails!!!) After this experience i'm now copying ALL my data on my server with data HDD in RAID1 (mirrored) and i have two seperated external backups from this partition, one of them stored in another house!
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I have a separate hard-drive that I auto-backup to regularly.
In case that fries or gets nicked I also backup manually to several different www locations/vaults/archives [my zumodrive is automatic but has not much space].
I too once lost a hard-drive - completely gone - so I too know the pain - but at least my pain was having to restore almost everything from backups - lost about a week's work in the end, and the time needed to fix everything back as it was.
I strongly suggest that you leave your hard-drive alone - everything you do with it will potentially overwrite something you might want.
Get it to someone who knows how to recover data - they might be able to get at least something back... -
Have you tried to locate the files .skb file?
I believe this is the backup file created by SketchUp, and is not normally intended to be opened, (but this ain't normally)
I remember reading something about this a while back, so may be worth some research.
I tried to open your file using all the usual tricks, (renaming, dragging into skp icon, open from within application etc) but sorry no luck. -
The SKP is missing the correct header - I tried adding one manually, but it's foobar... Google can sometime recover bad SKPs - try them...
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Maybe http://www.piriform.com/recuva can help.
I have tried Doublecad and various converters to get your file to open/transform, but no luck untill now.
good luck!
Bep
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Oh, this hurts my heart
I've lost some things over the years, but not everything.
I truly hope you're able to recover most or all of your work.I'm paranoid about backup: I have a 5-disk raid on my machine, auto-back-up data to a 4-disk Drobo and backup to Carbonite.
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Oh, that hurts! My sympathies. Also, another advice is to do optical backups regularly too. DVD's can't be overwritten (as long as you close it.)
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Really sorry to hear this. This happened to me many years ago. Since then I do daily back-ups. I now keep my work current on 2 separate working computers, a portable hard drive and a network drive. The network drives are awesome. I have a buffalo twin single terabyte network drive. It automatically backs up work as well as duplicates it on the second drive should either drive fail. It was probably the best $250 I have ever spent.
Keep your chin up. The one thing you haven't lost is the knowledge to create new work.
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Kris
What a shame but all may not be lost.
I use File Scavenger 3.0
Old app but will dig out the files as long as the drive works.
More than once I have said yes to the delete and kill key
http://file-scavenger.en.softonic.com/
My version was about $50 US and worth every penny.
It will recover a whole drive but must copy to another backup drive.
Also as I recall it will also copy selected folders to a different folder on the same drive.
Do take look at the link info.It really works.
Really sorry for you
dtr
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Thanks for all the kind words... I've run several recovery programs and have been able to find the files I lost however all are corrupt. so now I'm going to mail off the hard-drive to professional. I'll be using this company unless one of you knows of a better company or sees some reason why I shouldn't.
They say I mail it to them and then they diagnose and evaluate the drive and what it will take to get the info out. cost is between $500 and $1100... no data no cost they say. and an estimate before any work starts. so sounds good to me. and they're #1 on Google for the term "data recovery" no easy feat in itself. so fingers crossed.
Again, I appreciate the comforting and the advice. I'm quite embarrassed, I should know better. but I thought this might stand as a lesson to others... So at least there might be some benefit from my loss.
I'll keep the thread updated to the progress.
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Kris, just a thought! Are you going to make a copy of the drive before sending or is this even possible?
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I was thinking about that... but I don't think it would do much good as the important files are down below and I would think not copy-able. but I would be interested in hear as I have the cloning software and I have an extra identical sized drive.
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I learned today that all I have to show for the last 14 years of work is what's in my head... Data Recovery Specialist says... "Files Unrecoverable." Heart Break to Ensue...
@unknownuser said:
Unfortunately due to the extent of physical/logical damage found on the media, this case has been deemed not recoverable. An email detailing specific findings to follow.
Regards,
The SalvageData Team -
http://www.carbonite.com/en/ $59 a year and it's unlimited. It takes a long time to backup the first copy, but at least you are protected against disasters as well.
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Really sorry Kris. You still have our undying respect but I guess that's not quite enough at present... And you have the legacy of the projects that were built.
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That's incredibly bad luck, Kris. I really feel for you...especially in view of the fact that you've been able to recover virtually nothing...and the thought of how this must be affecting your custom house plan business is truly terrifying.
You say you've lost the entire 14 years work. I know this is no consolation...but in the spirit of your original post (a lesson to others); how did you manage to go 14 years without backing up at all? By that, I mean...presuming that you have bought new PC systems in that time, how did you transfer the data from your old PC to its replacement?...or upgrade you OS? (I see you're now on Windows 7)
Do you still have any old machines lying around, or given to relatives, that might have been reformatted but not had too much new stuff loaded onto them yet? They might be recoverable, even if your work machine isn't. -
Sorry to hear.
Have you installed on top of the data or is the PC just saying the drive can't be read?
Why I ask is because I "lost" a drive that couldn't be read even by several recovery software.
Eventually it turn out that if I turned UAC off (in Windows Vista/Windows 7) and restarted.
It all came back. -
Sorry to hear of your situation. We have got good results with Norman-Ibas data recovery. Part of http://www.krollontrack.com/ (pick your country from the list).
About recovery programs, GetDataBack for NTFS has worked well, if data is not badly overwritten or disk is not physically broken. http://www.runtime.org/data-recovery-software.htm -
Another vote here for "carbonite". Very cheap for the amount of storage you can get and its been a life saver for me on a couple of occasions. Also a handy feature is that you can remotely access all your backed up files no matter where you are in the world. Handy when you realise you left that all important client presentation back at home when your a thousand miles away!!
Data recovery specialists seem to be a licence to print money. I've never known anyone that has been able to recover data from a wiped/trashed hard drive. All you ever get is a large bill!
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