![]() I got quoted as high as $8K to get my data back. I called a bunch of places, wanting to get my drive recovered. Lesson 2: Using a computer with a mechanical drive on a flight is risky, even though everyone seems to do it totally unaware of what might happen. For added safety, FedEx yourself the backup cards separate from your flight. ![]() Shoot on two cards at once, main in RAW, backups in JPGs. Lesson 1: never ever erase memory cards until the client has their photos in their possession. Luckily for me, the scratch must’ve missed all the important data, other than perhaps the directory which Disk Warrior corrected. That probably caused the platters to wobble beyond their design and broke the motor. I remember my ears popping at the same time as my Mac shut off. What likely happened was that we momentarily superseded that rating when there was a sudden surge in air pressure in the cabin. It turns out there’s an atmospheric pressure rating on spinning hard drives. I thanked him for his time, hung up and went to work on replicating what he said they did, sans clean room, just canned air for cleanup before closing the drive. When I asked why it was so expensive, this guy went into minute detail what they did: “see, we have to use a clean room to remove your platters and put them in a new working drive”. Patiently waiting for version 6 which I’ll gladly keep in my toolbox for the future.Ĭlick to expand.I called a bunch of places, wanting to get my drive recovered. I’d rather give my money to Aloft than give into ransomware. Another app is asking for hundreds of dollars to recover the drive and can indeed see the files. Nothing super essential but recovering the drive would save me a lot of time. After so many times, it eventually corrupted the directory and won’t mount. Within minutes, the directory was rebuilt and there they were: every single photo from the entire week, just a few non essential pics with scrambled digital artifacts.Ĭurrently, I have an encrypted APFS drive that my iPad Pro kept unmounting unprompted. Hastily paid what I thought was an exorbitant licensing fee which turned out to be the most value I’ve ever got out of an app. More advice: recovery pros use Disk Warrior. Couldn’t make sense of the ones and zeros. My Mac recognized the drive and saw that there was data on it. Gulp.Īfter weeks of agony and swapping between telling the couple or getting plastic surgery and running away to Europe, I got advice about transplanting the platters to an identical drive enclosure. I could load the photos in Lightroom and wipe the cards. I hadn’t accounted for a week of photos and couldn’t find a place that sold CF cards but no problem, I had my MacBookPro with me. I had gone to the Caribbean to shoot a destination wedding and when I arrived, the couple asked me to document the entire trip, not just the wedding. The preview of the restored files and the directory is very limited-it just shows a list of files, and it’s not possible to analyze if they are broken or not.Click to expand.Disk Warrior quite literally saved my career. DiskWarrior also doesn’t do a good job when it comes to explaining some of its options, forcing you to read the manual. The program doesn’t have a close button, so you have to close it from the menu or dock. The automatic disk monitoring module is very old and does not support many modern drives, including those found inside modern Macs with M1 and T2 chips. ![]() The program supports only one method of scanning: the repair of HFS and HFS+ directories.ĭisk monitoring. The program doesn't work as a full-featured data recovery software - it can't recover deleted/lost/formatted data. DiskWarrior doesn’t support automatic updates, so each and every update must be downloaded and installed manually. The application doesn’t officially support macOS Monterey, but we were able to get it to work just fine on the latest version of Apple’s operating system. The developers of DiskWarrior don’t offer a free trial version, so there’s no way for customers to test the software for free. Macs with the new M1 processor are not supported by the latest version of Disk Warrior. On the official website, the developers have been promising a major new update with support for APFS for more than 2 years now, but nobody knows when it will arrive. Since then, not a single update has been released. That’s a huge downside considering that Apple has been using APFS as its default file system for some time now.ĭevelopment. ![]() DiskWarrior supports only HFS and HFS+ drives. On startup, the application always minimizes all other open windows for some reason, which can be quite annoying when you have multiple other windows opened.įile system support. ![]()
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