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Data recovery - To reason data had to be recovered

temi

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I found this absolutely facinating, some of the reasons are amusing, other are outright silly:



• A customer who told engineers she had "washed away all her data" after putting a USB stick through a cycle in her washing machine.
• A father who, while feeding his baby daughter, forgot about the USB stick in his top pocket. As he leaned over her high chair, the device fell into a dish of apple puree.
• A fisherman took his laptop in his rowboat. Both he and the laptop went overboard, taking all his data to the bottom of a lake.
• One wedding photographer overwrote the photos of one wedding with those of another event, and needed to escape the wrath of the newlyweds.
• During an experiment, a scientist spilled acid on an external hard drive, burning away his important data.
• In the middle of an argument, a businessman threw a USB stick at his partner, with the device ending up in several pieces on the floor. Unfortunately it contained valuable company plans.
• A fire destroyed an office, sparing only a few CDs which had melted to the inside of their cases.
• A scientist was fed up with his hard drive squeaking, so he drilled a hole through the casing and poured in oil, stopping both the squeaking and the hard drive.
• To test the functionality of a parachute, a camera was dropped from a plane. The parachute failed and the camera shattered into several pieces, but the device's memory stick was reassembled and the footage was recovered.
• After discovering ants had taken up residence in his external hard drive, a photographer took the cover off and sprayed the interior with insect repellent. The ants were killed off and the data was eventually recovered.
All the data on the compromised hardware was recovered, the company said.



source: news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-6221699.html
 
Hahaha! I remember when I worked as the Information Technology Admin for a company.
We had just acquired a new partner, and had to dump their data onto our servers.

Well, they had 7 backup tapes, all of which contained one backup, spanning the entire
disk set. I had - unfortunately - grabbed disk #7 thinking it was another disk I could
erase, and used it for one of my backups for our engineering department.

Imagine my shock when that tape backup was needed, and so I began the restore.
Once I inserted disk #6, and went to grab #7 next, it wasn't there...

Long story short, a backup company wanted $15k (yes, fifteen thousand US dollars)
to restore the date on the erased disk. We didn't pay, and I did not get in trouble :)
 
Well, I feel identified with the post. I've lost data by a simple mistake as not change the license of the antivirus, so an Excel workbook has crashed with a virus and I've lost all my data. Then, I've bought a recovery software called ExcelFIX and I could recover all my data, but I think that many things are usual.
 
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