CD and DVD utilities

CD DVD UtilityMagic Disk
Virtual CD/DVD driver. With this program you can access or mount an ISO image as a virtual CD/DVD drive just like any regular CD/DVD drive. Supports multiple CD/DVD image formats, including: iso, bin, cif, nrg, etc. Freeware for Windows.

Burn4Free
Free DVD and CD burning program for Windows.

BurnCDCC
This freeware utility can be used to burn an ISO file to a CD/DVD disc. Useful e.g. when you have downloaded a Linux OS installation ISO file from the Web.

IsoBuster
CD and DVD data recovery tool. It supports all CD and DVD formats and all common CD and DVD file-systems. Not free.

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Hard Drive Data Recovery Services(Seagate, Western Digital, Samsung)

Hard Drive Data Recovery Services(Seagate, Western Digital, Samsung) Hard disk failures are so common that data recovery is a multi-billion dollar industry. If you need to recover deleted photos, have a hard drive repair, or retrieve data for a business, a data recovery service can help to deal with the panic of losing files and information.

If you select the data recovery services offered by the service providers named below, they will not void the warranty associated with the disk drive you purchased from a Seagate, Western Digital and Samsung resellers or distributors.

Hard Drive Data Recovery Service Provides will not void the warranty:

Seagate Hard Drive Data Recovery Services

Seagate Data Recovery Services are a pay-per-use service and not covered by a hard drive’s warranty.

If your drive is still under warranty and you intend to pursue data recovery, you must do the data recovery before exchanging the drive.  Once a drive has been returned for warranty exchange, any data on the drive is forfeited and lost.

Seagate Data Recovery Service

Western Digital Hard Drive Data Recovery Services:

Western Digital will not void the warranty associated with the disk drive you purchased from a Western Digital reseller or distributor.

Western Digital Data Recovery Services

Samsung Hard Drive Data Recovery Services:

For your reference, below is a list of data recovery service providers that can open your Samsung HDD product and (if connected through the link below) provide a seal or proof of data recovery that will not void your Samsung HDD limited warranty.

Samsung Data Recovery Services

Note: To retain the warranty status of your drive, you should ensure that the service provider you select provides you with written verification, on its company letterhead, that it has performed data recovery or other services on your hard drive.

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BF41-00354A Samsung PCB Circuit Board

HDD Printed circuit board (PCB) with board number BF41-00354A is usually used on these Samsung hard disk drives: ST640LM001, HN-M640MBB/VAO, FW 2AR10002, Samsung 640GB SATA 2.5 Hard Drive; HN-M101MBB, HN-M101MBB, FW 2AR10001, Samsung 1TB SATA 2.5 Hard Drive; HN-M500MBB, HN-M500MBB/M, FW 2AR10002, SSSE, Samsung 500GB SATA 2.5 Hard Drive; ST1000LM024, HN-M101MBB/SCC, FW 2AR10001, Seagate 1TB…

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Possible Hard Drive Disappeared Failure

Hard-Drive-Disappeared-Failure Q: So I just completed a clean install of Windows 7 and I was installing some software that was originally on my primary HDD to my secondary HDD ,and the installation was taking so much longer than usual, The progress bar was almost full then it slowed down, then completely stopped, so I just gave it some more time. I opened my browser (Opera) to go on youtube and pass the time but my speed dial was gone! and the “Speed Dial File” is located on my secondary HDD, so I thought to myself that either the file is corrupt or something happened to the hard drive. I checked “Computer” and sure enough its gone! Its gone on both Computer and Disk Management, but for some reason is detected by BIOS. its the “Seagate Barracuda 7200 3 TB 7200RPM ST3000DM001” This happened after only after 1 month of use. I have over 1.5 TB of data on that hard drive, and I pretty much install everything on that drive, I have a back up but my data is constantly changing, I wanted a RAID setup but I really dont have the money for that.

Seagate Barracuda 7200 3 TB 7200RPM SATA 6 Gb/s NCQ 64MB Cache 3.5-Inch Internal Bare Drive ST3000DM001 ($146 on Amazon.com)

Is there anything at all I can do? Is my data 100% lost? An help would be appreciated.

Specs:
ASUS M4A88T-M Motherboard
Seagate Barracuda 7200 320 GB
Seagate Barracuda 7200 3 TB 7200RPM ST3000DM001
AMD Phenom II X4 965 Black Edition Deneb 3.4GHz
Rosewill Stallion Series RD500-2DB 500W ATX12V Power Supply
SAPPHIRE Radeon 6950 OC Edition
Kingston ValueRAM 4GB 1333MHz
Windows 7 Ultimate X64

so I just rebooted my PC and the hard drive is back! Works just as good but what if it happens again? is this a sign of failure?

A: I would suggest you to change the sata cable and the power one from the psu see if that fix the issue adding this check if there is a new bios for those big drive on asus

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Undelete Freewares

Undelete Freewares1. Freeware: Undelete Plus

  • License: Freeware (limited time)
  • OS: Win 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista
  • Publisher: Phoenix Technologies LTD.
  • File System support: supports all Windows file systems for hard and floppy drives including FAT12/16/32,NTFS/NTFS5 and image recovery from Compact Flash, Smart Media, Multi Media and Secure Digital cards.
  • Screenshot: http://www.undelete-plus.com/screens.html
  • Description: A quick and effective way to restore accidentally deleted files. It can also recover files that have been emptied from the Recycle Bin, permanently deleted files within Windows using the Shift + Delete, and files that have been deleted from within a Command Prompt.

2. Freeware: Undelete NOW!

  • License: Freeware (email required)
  • OS: Win 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista
  • Publisher: WCCL
  • File System support: Every kind of disk, including FAT 12/16/32 and NTFS (including compressed and encrypted) partitions. It supports regular hard disks, backup disks, USB drives, and any other disks shown in Windows Explorer.
  • Screenshot: http://www.undelete-now.com/undelete-now/screenshots.aspx
  • Description: Undelete NOW! recovers your lost files, no matter how they were deleted. Using powerful bit-by-bit scanning methods, you can be sure to get your files back quickly and easily.

3. Freeware: NTFS Undelete

  • License: Freeware (open source)
  • OS: 2000/2003/XP/Vista
  • Publisher: A-FF Labs
  • File System support: NTFS
  • Screenshot: http://ntfsundelete.com/img/screenshot.png
  • Description: NTFS Undelete is free and open source software that allows you to recover deleted files. It recovers files directly from hard drive, and it will work even if you empty Recycle Bin.

4. Freeware: EASEUS Deleted File Recovery

  • Version: 2.1.1
  • License: Freeware
  • OS: Windows 2000/2003/XP/VISTA
  • Publisher: CHENGDU YIWO Tech Development Co., Ltd.
  • File System support: Supports FAT 12, FAT 16, FAT 32 and NTFS file system.
  • Screenshot: http://www.easeus-deletedrecovery.com/screenshots.html
  • Description: EASEUS Deleted File Recovery is a fully functional freeware designed to recover deleted files from all types of media such as Hard Disk Drives, Floppy Drives, Smart Media, Compact Flash, Memory Sticks, and other types of removable media.

5. Freeware: Smart Data Recovery Enterprise

  • License: Freeware
  • OS: NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista
  • Publisher: Smart PC ® Solutions, Inc.
  • File System support: Supports FAT 12, FAT 16, FAT 32 and NTFS file system.
  • Screenshot: http://www.smartpctools.com/network_data_recovery/screens/netrecovery2.jpg
  • Description: Recover deleted files and data remotely over the network. Smart Data Recovery Enterprise is a free and easy data recovery solution for network administrators. Undelete files and data remotely without leaving a chair!

6. Freeware: Recover Files

  • Version: 2.1
  • License: Freeware
  • OS: Win 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista
  • Publisher: Undelete & Unerase, Inc.
  • File System support: Supports FAT 12, FAT 16, FAT 32 and NTFS file system.
  • Screenshot: http://www.undeleteunerase.com/screenshots.html
  • Description: A professional file recovery software that allows it’s user to recover accidentally deleted files. Even files removed from the Recycle Bin, network drive, compact flash card, portable drives, in a DOS window, or from Windows Explorer with the SHIFT key held down.

7. Freeware: DATA Unerase Personal Edition™

  • License: Freeware
  • OS: ME/NT/2000/XP/2003 and Vista
  • Publisher: OctaneSoft
  • File System support: FAT 12, FAT 16, FAT 32 and NTFS file system.
  • Screenshot: http://www.octanesoft.com/screenshots.php?prog=edata&page=2
  • Description: eDATA Unerase Personal Edition is software used to restore files that have been deleted through normal methods, including accidental deletions from the recycle bin. This is a freeware and basic version of eDATA Unerase. It recovers only deleted files located on local logical disks visible by host OS. This version will not find lost files.

8. Freeware: Recuva – File Recovery

  • Version: 1.24.399
  • License: Freeware
  • OS: Windows Vista, XP, 2003, 2000 and 98.
  • Publisher: Piriform Ltd.
  • File System support: FAT 12, FAT 16, FAT 32 and NTFS file system.
  • Screenshot: http://www.recuva.com/screenshots
  • Description: Recuva (pronounced “recover”) is a freeware Windows utility to restore files that have been accidentally deleted from your computer. This includes files emptied from the Recycle bin as well as images and other files that have been deleted by user error from digital camera memory cards or MP3 players. It will even bring back files that have been deleted by bugs, crashes and viruses!
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How to Troubleshoot SCSI/ATA hard drive combinations?

SCSI Hard Drive When SCSI drives are connected to the SCSI host adapter, with an ATA drive installed, you are unable to boot from the ATA drive.

The SCSI host adapter and the ATA port on the motherboard could be set for the same IRQ or address or both. Check the following:

  • For the primary port, the ATA ports on the motherboard will likely be set to IRQ 14, and the I/O address will likely be set to 1F0-1F7.
  • For the secondary port, the ATA ports on the motherboard will likely be set to IRQ 15, and the I/O address will likely be set to 170-177.
  • The SCSI host adapter’s IRQ and I/O address should not conflict with the above settings.
  • If using a plug-in controller or host adapter with a BIOS, make sure the BIOS address does not conflict with the address settings of other cards or devices.
  • Check the documentation for the motherboard or SCSI host adapter for detailed information on how to change these settings. If unavailable, contact the vendor of the ATA or SCSI host adapter.

Once these setting are properly implemented, your computer should be able to recognize available ATA and SCSI drives with no problem.

You are unable (or there is a long delay when trying) to boot from the SCSI drive.

 The motherboard’s BIOS might be “pinging” the ATA bus looking for an ATA drive. When using a SCSI drive as a boot device, there should not be an ATA drive physically attached as the Primary 0 (master) drive, and the CMOS settings for the Primary 0 drive should be set to “none” or “not installed”. In addition, check the CMOS settings for the Primary 1, Secondary 0, and Secondary 1 drives. If any of those drives are not physically present, the corresponding settings should be set to “none” or “not installed” as well.

If you are still unable to boot from the drive, make sure it has been properly prepared as a bootable drive – make sure it has been formatted and has active partitioning set.

The SCSI drive is not recognized at full capacity.

Make sure the SCSI host adapter’s setting for “above 1GB support” is enabled. For drives larger than 8.4 Gbytes, enable the BIOS’ INT13 Extensions.

If the drive is reporting less than its full factory capacity to the controller BIOS, it is possible that the drive may have been programmed to a smaller capacity (Seagate SCSI drives support a change capacity feature).

If this is the case, standard drives may be returned to full capacity (or reprogrammed to any capacity up to full capacity) using Seagate’s SeaTools utility.

The SCSI drive is not performing optimally.
Try the following:

  • Make sure your card and motherboard’s BIOS are optimally configured for performance. You might need to contact the manufacturer of the card for assistance with these options.
  • Check your SCSI cable and the drives’ ID, termination, and termination power settings.
  • Make sure the cable is of good quality and is not coiled up inside the computer.
  • Try to route SCSI ribbon cabling away from the power supply.
  • If this is the only device attached internally, set the ID to 0 and terminate the drive.
  • If there are 2 or more devices internally attached to the SCSI cable, set the boot drive to ID 0, set the other devices to any other unassigned SCSI ID (except 7, which is usually reserved for the SCSI host adapter), and terminate the drive that is physically at the end of the cable. Termination power should be set on both drives to match the requirements of the SCSI host adapter.

The following recommendation is DATA DESTRUCTIVE. Proceeding will ERASE ALL DATA FROM THE DRIVE.

    We recommend that you use the SCSI host adapter’s utility to low-level format (or initialize) the SCSI drive. This will help ensure that the drive is properly communicating and optimally synchronized to the host adapter. If possible, BACKUP the drive(s) before following this procedure.
  1. If this is not possible, and the data is needed, please consult a data recovery service to assist you in recovering your data.
  2. A low-level format typically takes 45 – 60 minutes per gigabyte. The larger the drive, the longer the time required for completion.
  3. DO NOT TERMINATE OR ABORT THE LOW-LEVEL FORMAT! The drive(s) can become permanently damaged.

After the low-level formats are completed, reboot the computer from a bootable system or recovery diskette and proceed to prepare the drive for use. In a DOS or Windows 95/98 environment:

1. Use FDISK to partition the drives as desired. Ensure that the C: partition is a “PRI-DOS, ACTIVE” partition.

2. After partitioning the drives, reboot the computer.

3. Use FORMAT to high-level format each partition on the SCSI drives.

a) Type format X:, where X is the drive letter of the drive you wish to format.

b) If you want to make the C: partition bootable, add the “/S” parameter to the end of the command to transfer the system files. (At the command prompt, type FORMAT C: /S)

Each partition should now be formatted to its full capacity, ready to store data.

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