Tips for Learning Data Recovery Technology

Tips for Learning Data Recovery TechnologyData Recovery, as the new field of IT industry has been gradually accepted by computer users. Computer began to be popular in our work and study. More and more people store the information on the computer. As the storage equipment’s production process and other factors, any kind of data storage media have the risk of data losing.

When encounters the data losing, the users’ storage data can’t be reconstructed. However the user needs the data urgently and don’t have enough time to rebuild it. Now using the data recovery technology to get the data back can greatly reduce the loss. This is why data recovery has large market.

Because the data recovery business had been developed in past few years, data recovery technicians are relatively lacking. There is a lot of data recovery software can be download by data recovery fans, so more emphasis on software use. The software is the combination of regular algorithms. However, the data loss reasons are different. Therefore, there is no one kind of data recovery software can recover the data loss in all the cases.

As the data recovery business’ rise, more and more organizations and individuals have taken part in data recovery training business. The result is the data recovery training levels are too different.

So what about the data recovery knowledge we should to learn? As we mentioned the data loss reasons are vastly different, the data recovery cases are too much to learn. So what we should to learn at the beginning?

We can’t visit a file just because some information is lost. If we know the data store principle and which information lost will cause the file lost, we can recover the file. In fact, data recovery software are also recover the data by using the data store principle (file system principle). However, the data recovery software just can deal with the relatively simple types of malfunctions.

Therefore, to study the data recovery technology, Microsoft’s file system (FAT16, FAT32, NTFS) must be very fluent. Just learn some common data recovery cases can’t master the data recovery technology. When learn the senior, you will find you don’t know how to do.

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Western Digital PCB 2060-701393-002

Swap Western Digital  PCB 2060-701393-002(Printed Circuit Boards) to recover your data from damaged HDD due to PCB failure. 2060-701393-002 is the board number on this PCB. If your HDD’s PCB has problems, the drive usually cannot boot up or there may be an inaccurate display in the BIOS of the hard drive’s information. Also power may not get to the hard drive and as a result it will not spin up.

Western Digital 2060-701393-002 PCB Board Details:

Board Number: 2060-701393-002
Main Controller IC: 88i6545-TFJ1
HDD Motor Combo IC: L6283 1.3
Manufacturer: Western Digital

Note: Hard drive failures are NOT always caused by circuit board failure.

Swap PCB 2060-701393-002 will not solve the problem below:

1. The hard drive will power up normally (no ticking noises, errors etc) but will not be recognized by the computer;
2. The hard drive will power up normally and be recognized correctly but will report a size of 0 bytes;
3. The hard drive will power up but report SMART errors on boot;

Western Digital 2060-701393-002 PCB Photos:

Western Digital  PCB 2060-701393-002

Buy this pcb board online: Western Digital PCB 2060-701393-002

More Western Digital SATA PCB

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How to Make Use of the Internet for Effective Data Recovery

backupIf you’ve been reading HD Doctor for some time now you would have come across an article or two on how important backing up your data regularly is and how to do it. I have once played with backing up important data on my computer before and I had to pay dearly for it, I have now learned my lessons and I’ll be talking about that in this post.

It is also very important for you to realize that you shouldn’t just depend on backing up your files on a DVD or an external hard disk, because even though these are great options a place more secure for you to backup your files is the internet and this article will be talking about how to make use of the internet to backup your files.

The Importance of Online Backup
Before I go into how to back up your data online I’ll first be explaining some of the major reasons why you need to consider backing up your files online below.

It is Secure: The number one reason why I prefer to be backing up my files online compared to backing it up on external devices is because it is secure. You can easily worry about your CD being infected by a virus or about anything going wrong with your hard disk but with online backup you don’t have to worry about any external drive corrupting – it is the most secure form of backup system I have seen.

It is Free: The next great thing about online backup is that it is free. There are various online backup services and most of them give you gigabytes of disk space which is enough to store your basic and most important files. If you need more space you can easily go for a premium package. This isn’t the case with online backup also because you don’t have to buy anything. Just set up the right software on your computer and you’re ready to go.

It is Reliable: Online backup systems can be trusted and relied upon in hard times. You don’t have to worry about disks getting lost or files suddenly getting erased. The only thing you need is a strong password you can easily remember and you’re good to go.

It is Flexible: The major thing I love the most about online backup systems is the flexibility it has. There are thousands of backup service providers fighting for your attention and you can easily choose your favorite and the one you think is best for you.

Top Online Backup Services
Once you’ve made up your mind to start backing up your files online there are a few services that can help you get started. Two of my favorite and most used services are listed below:

1. Dropbox: I personally use dropbox and I trust and recommend it. All you need to do is create a free account and you will be allotted a 2.5GB disk space for you to store anything and you can easily earn more space by referring others. You only need to install the dropbox software that will create a folder on your computer. You can easily copy any file you want to backup to your dropbox online account to this folder and it will be transferred there instantly.

2. Mozy Backup: Mozy backup is also another great option and even though it isn’t as popular and sophisticated as dropbox it is also a great option. All you need to do is create an account and install the mozy client – with this you can easily backup your files anytime and also schedule it to backup anytime you want.

This guest post is written by Paul who helps you choose the best Comcast cable internet

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Levels of Data Recovery Specialists

Data Recovery SpecialistsGenerally data recovery specialists can be divided into three different levels, according to their technical competence and the recovery methods they use.

1. First level’s data recovery specialists just can use the software which are developed by others. Such as the widely used data recovery software: FinalData、EasyRecovery and R-STUDIO; The system recovery software: DISKGEN (DISKMAN), etc. In fact, these are very good software. Even if a great skilled programmer is difficult to write the similar data recovery software or the better software than the above-mentioned software. However, sometimes these classical software can’t play a role with two reasons:

a). The situations of data loss are complicated and different. The software can’t be applied to every case;

b). These software don’t have thought. They use the fixed mode which is set by programmer to judge and deal with the fault. Sometimes the result may be biased or even wrong. Therefore these technicians who just can use the ready-made software have the limit capacity to deal with the data loss problem.

2. Second level’s data recovery specialists know the main file systems’ sector store rules. They can analyze data which stored on the sectors. Then fix some error system parameters by the malfunction reasons and the status of the storage medium. With the above-mentioned classical software, their problem solving skills will be greatly enhanced. When they analyze the sector’s data, they can give full play to their logical thinking skills, and then do the right operation.

3. Third level’s data recovery specialists can develop corresponding program according to their need to analyze the sectors’ data. Using these programs, the operator can quickly and accurately judge the reasons which caused the malfunction, and then find the best way to recover the data. With the above-mentioned classical software, their data recovery skill can attain the higher level. At the same times, these technicians can constantly improve these software’s function by their operation experience. Let these software can help others to detect and diagnose data loss reasons better.

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Hard Drive Data Recovery in Vancouver, Canada

Hard Drive Data Recovery in Vancouver, CanadaData recovery near Vancouver, BC, Canada

Looking for a professional data recovery service in Vancouver, BC area? In vancouver area there are many recovery companies and here is a list just for your referance:

1. Aceon Data Recovery
Address: 890 West Pender St. #600, Vancouver
Tell: (604) 873-3300
Website: www.aceondatarecovery.com

Lost Your Data?… We’ll give you all the free data recovery advice you can handle. Aceon Clean Room Hard Drive Data Recovery. We recover Hard Drives, Smart Phones, Cell and Mobile Phones, Cameras and Flash Memory. No data no charge.

2. ReStoring Data Inc
Address: 666 Burrard Street #500, Vancouver
Tell: (877) 737-8003
Website: www.restoringdata.ca

ReStoring Data Inc. is a specialized data recovery and computer forensics company that focuses on recovering vital data from personal computer and notebook hard disk drives, as well as server drives, RAID arrays, memory cards, flash drives, and much more.

3. DataPro Data Recovery Lab
Address: 355 Burrard Street #1000, Vancouver
Tell: (604) 762-6359
Website: www.datarecoverypro.com

4. 1st Data Recovery

Address: 1066 West Hastings #2000, Vancouver
Tell: (604) 681-3770
Website: www.1stdatarecovery.com

Most data recovery $500.Any os,any media.Data recovery from dead,corrupted storage devices: hard drive,tape,raid server,PC,Mac,linux,Netware.

If you are living in vancouver area maybe you have heard about one or some all of them, they are all top-customer-reviews recovery companies that can help you so much. If you also know other companies can provide professional recovery services please feel free to contact me, I can list them here in time. Thank you!

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RAID Failures & Recovery

Correlated failures
RAID Failures & RecoveryThe theory behind the error correction in RAID assumes that failures of drives are independent. Given these assumptions it is possible to calculate how often they can fail and to arrange the array to make data loss arbitrarily improbable.

In practice, the drives are often the same age, with similar wear, and subject to the same environment. Since many drive failures are due to mechanical issues which are more likely on older drives, this violates those assumptions and failures are in fact statistically correlated. In practice then, the chances of a second failure before the first has been recovered is not nearly as unlikely as might be supposed, and data loss can, in practice, occur at significant rates.

A common misconception is that “server-grade” drives fail less frequently than consumer-grade drives. Two independent studies, one by Carnegie Mellon University and the other by Google, have shown that the “grade” of the drive does not relate to failure rates.

Atomicity
This is a little understood and rarely mentioned failure mode for redundant storage systems that do not utilize transactional features. Database researcher Jim Gray wrote “Update in Place is a Poison Apple”[28] during the early days of relational database commercialization. However, this warning largely went unheeded and fell by the wayside upon the advent of RAID, which many software engineers mistook as solving all data storage integrity and reliability problems. Many software programs update a storage object “in-place”; that is, they write a new version of the object on to the same disk addresses as the old version of the object. While the software may also log some delta information elsewhere, it expects the storage to present “atomic write semantics,” meaning that the write of the data either occurred in its entirety or did not occur at all.

However, very few storage systems provide support for atomic writes, and even fewer specify their rate of failure in providing this semantic. Note that during the act of writing an object, a RAID storage device will usually be writing all redundant copies of the object in parallel, although overlapped or staggered writes are more common when a single RAID processor is responsible for multiple drives. Hence an error that occurs during the process of writing may leave the redundant copies in different states, and furthermore may leave the copies in neither the old nor the new state. The little known failure mode is that delta logging relies on the original data being either in the old or the new state so as to enable backing out the logical change, yet few storage systems provide an atomic write semantic on a RAID disk.

While the battery-backed write cache may partially solve the problem, it is applicable only to a power failure scenario.

Since transactional support is not universally present in hardware RAID, many operating systems include transactional support to protect against data loss during an interrupted write. Novell NetWare, starting with version 3.x, included a transaction tracking system. Microsoft introduced transaction tracking via the journaling feature in NTFS. ext4 has journaling with checksums; ext3 has journaling without checksums but an “append-only” option, or ext3cow (Copy on Write). If the journal itself in a filesystem is corrupted though, this can be problematic. The journaling in NetApp WAFL file system gives atomicity by never updating the data in place, as does ZFS. An alternative method to journaling is soft updates, which are used in some BSD-derived system’s implementation of UFS.

This can present as a sector read failure. Some RAID implementations protect against this failure mode by remapping the bad sector, using the redundant data to retrieve a good copy of the data, and rewriting that good data to the newly mapped replacement sector. The UBE (Unrecoverable Bit Error) rate is typically specified at 1 bit in 1015 for enterprise class disk drives (SCSI, FC, SAS) , and 1 bit in 1014 for desktop class disk drives (IDE/ATA/PATA, SATA). Increasing disk capacities and large RAID 5 redundancy groups have led to an increasing inability to successfully rebuild a RAID group after a disk failure because an unrecoverable sector is found on the remaining drives. Double protection schemes such as RAID 6 are attempting to address this issue, but suffer from a very high write penalty.

Write cache reliability
The disk system can acknowledge the write operation as soon as the data is in the cache, not waiting for the data to be physically written. This typically occurs in old, non-journaled systems such as FAT32, or if the Linux/Unix “writeback” option is chosen without any protections like the “soft updates” option (to promote I/O speed whilst trading-away data reliability). A power outage or system hang such as a BSOD can mean a significant loss of any data queued in such a cache.

Often a battery is protecting the write cache, mostly solving the problem. If a write fails because of power failure, the controller may complete the pending writes as soon as restarted. This solution still has potential failure cases: the battery may have worn out, the power may be off for too long, the disks could be moved to another controller, the controller itself could fail. Some disk systems provide the capability of testing the battery periodically, however this leaves the system without a fully charged battery for several hours.

An additional concern about write cache reliability exists, specifically regarding devices equipped with a write-back cache—a caching system which reports the data as written as soon as it is written to cache, as opposed to the non-volatile medium. The safer cache technique is write-through, which reports transactions as written when they are written to the non-volatile medium.

Equipment compatibility
The methods used to store data by various RAID controllers are not necessarily compatible, so that it may not be possible to read a RAID array on different hardware, with the exception of RAID 1, which is typically represented as plain identical copies of the original data on each disk. Consequently a non-disk hardware failure may require the use of identical hardware to recover the data, and furthermore an identical configuration has to be reassembled without triggering a rebuild and overwriting the data. Software RAID however, such as implemented in the Linux kernel, alleviates this concern, as the setup is not hardware dependent, but runs on ordinary disk controllers, and allows the reassembly of an array. Additionally, individual RAID1 disks (software, and most hardware implementations) can be read like normal disks when removed from the array, so no RAID system is required to retrieve the data. Inexperienced data recovery firms typically have a difficult time recovering data from RAID drives, with the exception of RAID1 drives with conventional data structure.

Data recovery in the event of a failed array
With larger disk capacities the odds of a disk failure during rebuild are not negligible. In that event the difficulty of extracting data from a failed array must be considered. Only RAID 1 stores all data on each disk. Although it may depend on the controller, some RAID 1 disks can be read as a single conventional disk. This means a dropped RAID 1 disk, although damaged, can often be reasonably easily recovered using a software recovery program. If the damage is more severe, data can often be recovered by professional data recovery specialists. RAID 5 and other striped or distributed arrays present much more formidable obstacles to data recovery in the event the array fails.

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What Are SSD-Optimized File Systems?

SSD-Optimized File SystemsPrior to SSDs, or solid state drives, all data was stored on magnetic spinning hard disk drives (HDDs). Many computers still have HDDs, but this is changing due to the better performance of SSDs. For instance, HDDs have moving parts, are more susceptible to breakage, are louder, heavier, and provide irregular performance when it comes to accessing data. SSDs fix all of those problems.

A cheap example of a solid-state drive is a thumb drive used to store a gigabyte or two of data. It is becoming more and more cost-effective to create larger SSDs to hold data due to their increased speed and performance. However, there is one problem: SSDs typically don’t last as long as HDDs unless the file system is optimized to accommodate them. They can’t handle as many write/erase functions as HDDs, meaning they don’t last as long. If an SSD is being used as a hard drive, files may be written and erased hundreds of times per day, making it necessary for operating systems to take certain precautions for solid-state drives.

If a file system is optimized to work with solid-state drives, the SSD can last as long as a hard disk drive of similar caliber. As more and more netbooks and computers are being built with SSD file storage hardware, it is becoming more and more necessary for the operating systems on these machines to have SSD-optimized file systems.

Who Are SSD-Optimized File Systems For?

Anyone whose machine uses a solid-state drive such as people involved with web hosting, streaming video, equities trading or another high-data-volume pursuit should be sure that they have a SSD and that their file system is optimized. While few netbooks, laptops and desktop computers produced for mass consumption have solid-state data drive hardware, there are several notable ones. These include:

* Asus Eee PC
* MacBook Air
* Lenovo Thinkpad
* Toshiba Portege R600
* Intel X-25E Extreme

As you can see, these include both low-end netbooks and high-priced laptops. As SSDs become less expensive to produce, analysts predict that more new computers will use SSD hardware. Many a dedicated server may also use SSD file storage due to the increased need for speed. Readers should check with their computers’ manufacturers to see if their machine uses an SSD file storage system, and should optimize their file systems accordingly. Non-optimized file systems run the risk of burning out the SSD prematurely, making it impossible to write or erase data and necessitating the purchase of new hardware.

Advantages of SSD-Optimized File Systems

* Operating system’s processes are better suited to solid state drives
* Make SSD hardware last longer

Disadvantages of SSD-Optimized File Systems

* May require an upgrade

Examples

The following operating systems represent SSD-optimized options you can take if you want to ensure that your system is its most efficient.

* Windows 7
* Sun Microsystems ZFS
* FreeBSD
* A variety of Linux systems
* Mac OS X 10.7

Conclusion

As stated before, not everyone needs to have SSD file storage. Currently, SSDs are still about ten times as expensive as comparable HDDs, though their performance improvement is arguably enough to offset the cost. As costs go down, more and more systems will be built with SSD hardware.

Given the fact that the big two OS providers, Apple and Microsoft, are switching to SSD-optimized file systems for their flagship products, many people won’t even have to worry about having an SSD-optimized system in the future. However, if you are still using an older operating system but plan to upgrade to newer file storage hardware, you should definitely consider switching to an SSD-optimized file system as well. Solid state may be on the horizon for mass consumption, but it is not yet fully here.

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Laptop Data Recovery

Laptop Data RecoveryIn today’s competitive business environment, data is the life line of any business, small or large corporate or individual. If your laptop suffered a crash, was damaged by impact or water, started making clicking noises, was accidentally formatted, or otherwise failed, you need professional help.

Common Causes of Laptop Data Loss:

  • Water or another liquid was spilled on the hard drive or computer
  • Water or another liquid was spilled on the hard drive or computer
  • The computer or hard drive was physically damaged by dropping, hitting against the wall, etc.
  • The computer or hard drive overheated for any reason or was damaged by fire
  • The computer or hard drive was damaged as a result of an electrical power surge or outage
  • The computer or hard drive was damaged as a result of an earthquake, storm, or natural disaster
  • Some or all of the partitions have been formatted (e.g., using fdisk)
  • You hear grinding or clicking noises coming from the computer or hard drive
  • A file or folder on your hard drive becomes inaccessible due for no apparent reason, or due to virus attack or virus infection
  • A file or folder was accidentally deleted
  • The hard drive is no longer recognized by the BIOS after rebooting
  • The system BIOS displays the message “Primary hard disk failure” or “Secondary hard disk failure”
  • The system displays the error message “boot disk error, insert boot disk press any key to continue”
  • The system displays the message “NTLDR is missing, Press any key to restart”
  • The partition table is corrupt or damaged for any reason.
  • The system displays the message “Operating system not found” or “missing operating system”
  • The BIOS recognizes the hard drive but with incorrect parameters
  • The BIOS recognizes the hard drive but the data is inaccessible
  • The hard drive reports bad sectors

How is Laptop Data Recovery Different?

Mobility, the laptop computer’s greatest advantage, is also its biggest threat. One of the leading causes of data loss in laptops is physical damage resulting from dropping or hitting the laptop while moving it around. Water damage is also a big contributor: spilling tea or coffee can break not only the hard drive, but any of the countless electronic components inside the laptop. The tight packing of all the hardware makes the situation even more dangerous.
Recovering data from a laptop demands new tools, new knowledge, and oftentimes, a whole new approach. Our engineers use specialized, custom-built equipment to handle the tiny parts found inside a laptop, and have the in-depth knowledge and experience of laptop architecture that is essential for successful laptop data recovery.

What To Do If You Lose Data On Laptop?

Stop Immediately & shut down your computer, If you detect any problem or hear any clicking grinding scratching noise coming from the disk drive. You need professional help.

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Data Recovery From Physical & Logical Damage

Logical Damage Data Recovery:

Data Recovery From Physical & Logical DamageOverwritten data
When data have been physically overwritten on a hard disk it is generally assumed that the previous data are no longer possible to recover. In 1996, Peter Gutmann, a computer scientist, presented a paper that suggested overwritten data could be recovered through the use of Scanning transmission electron microscopy. In 2001, he presented another paper on a similar topic. Substantial criticism has followed, primarily dealing with the lack of any concrete examples of significant amounts of overwritten data being recovered. To guard against this type of data recovery, he and Colin Plumb designed the Gutmann method, which is used by several disk scrubbing software packages.

Although Gutmann’s theory may be correct, there’s no practical evidence that overwritten data can be recovered. Moreover, there are good reasons to think that it cannot.

Corrupt filesystems
In some cases, data on a hard drive can be unreadable due to damage to the filesystem. In the majority of these cases, at least a portion of the original data can be recovered by repairing the damaged filesystem using specialized data recovery software. This type of data recovery can be performed by knowledgeable end-users as it requires no special physical equipment. However, more serious cases can still require expert intervention.

Online Data Recovery
“Online” or “Remote” data recovery is yet another method to restore the lost or deleted data. It is same as performing the regular software based recoveries except that this kind of recovery is performed over the Internet without physically having the drive or computer in possession. The recovery technician sitting somewhere else gains access to user’s computer and complete the recovery job online. In this scenario, the user doesn’t have to travel or send the media to anywhere physically.

Although online data recovery is convenient and useful in many cases, it still carries some points making it less popular than the classic data recovery methods. First of all, it requires a stable broadband Internet connection for it to be performed correctly, which many third world countries still lack. Also, it cannot be performed in case of physical damage to media and for such cases, the traditional in-lab recovery has to take place.

Physical Damage Data Recovery:
A wide variety of failures can cause physical damage to storage media. CD-ROMs can have their metallic substrate or dye layer scratched off; Hard disk drives can suffer any of several mechanical failures, such as head crashes and failed motors; Tapes can simply break. Physical damage always causes at least some data loss, and in many cases the logical structures of the file system are damaged as well. Any logical damage must be dealt with before files can be salvaged from the failed media.

Most physical damage cannot be repaired by end users. For example, opening a hard disk in a normal environment can allow airborne dust to settle on the platter and become caught between the platter and the read/write head, causing new head crashes that further damage the platter and thus compromise the recovery process. Furthermore, end users generally do not have the hardware or technical expertise required to make these repairs. Consequently, costly data recovery companies are often employed to salvage important data.

Physical Damage Recovery Techniques:
Recovering data from physically damaged hardware can involve multiple techniques. Some damage can be repaired by replacing parts in the hard disk. This alone may make the disk usable, but there may still be logical damage. A specialized disk-imaging procedure is used to recover every readable bit from the surface. Once this image is acquired and saved on a reliable medium, the image can be safely analysed for logical damage and will possibly allow for much of the original file system to be reconstructed.

Hardware repair
Media that has suffered a catastrophic electronic failure will require data recovery in order to salvage its contents.

Examples of physical recovery procedures are: removing a damaged PCB (printed circuit board) and replacing it with a matching PCB from a healthy drive, performing a live PCB swap (in which the System Area of the HDD is damaged on the target drive which is then instead read from the donor drive, the PCB then disconnected while still under power and transferred to the target drive), read/write head assembly with matching parts from a healthy drive, removing the hard disk platters from the original damaged drive and installing them into a healthy drive, and often a combination of all of these procedures. Some data recovery companies have procedures that are highly technical in nature and are not recommended for an untrained individual. Many of these procedures will void the manufacturer’s warranty.

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Hard Drive Data Recovery In Austin TX

Looking for a professional data recovery service in Austin TX area? In austin area there are many recovery companies and here is a list just for your referance:

Places for data recovery near Austin, TX

IT Data Recovery
www.itdatarecovery.com
809 West Oltorf Street, Austin
(512) 833-0568

Data Recovery Austin
www.datarecoveryinaustin.net
1153 San Jacinto Boulevard, Austin
(512) 318-2659

Flashback Data
www.flashbackdata.com
4029 South Capital of Texas Highway, Austin
(512) 301-5700

24 Hour Data
www.24hourdata.com
401 Congress Ave. suite 1540, Austin
(512) 692-7272

Certified Data Recovery
www.certifieddatarecovery.com
809 West Oltorf Street, Austin
(512) 771-7589

Secure Hard Drive Raid Data Recovery Services
www.securedatarecovery.com
7000 North Mopac Expressway, Austin
(512) 354-4059

If you are living in Austin area maybe you have heard about one or some all of them, they are all top-customer-reviews recovery companies that can help you so much. If you also know other companies can provide professional recovery services please feel free to contact me, I can list them here in time. Thank you!

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