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        <Name>Data Recovery Part 1, Including Hard Disk Recovery for Computer Data, and Recovery of Pictures locked in your camera's memory card.</Name>
        <Summary>Backup Early and Often, and when you don't do it often enough, know people who know how to recover data from hard disks in a pinch.</Summary>
        <Description>&lt;p&gt;by John Gaudio&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;I always tell my clients to backup their data, and I back mine up too, but sometimes something important either gets missed in the backup, or gets stored&amp;nbsp;after&amp;nbsp;your most recent backup.&amp;nbsp; Murphy's law, being what it is,&amp;nbsp;that's when your hard drive is most likely to fail.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Last&amp;nbsp;week&amp;nbsp;I spent five wonderful days&amp;nbsp;at my&amp;nbsp;sister's house in Houston.&amp;nbsp; Unfortunately, just before I left&amp;nbsp;my house for the airport, my&amp;nbsp;portable computer refused to&amp;nbsp;boot.&amp;nbsp; I packed it away&amp;nbsp;to&amp;nbsp;fix it on the plane, but alas, it wasn't that simple.&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;I&amp;nbsp;found a fellow in Houston, Shawn Zernik, owner of &lt;a title="Shawn Zernik is a professional, accomodating, and very sharp computer consultant in the greater Houston area." href="http://internetworkconsulting.net/" target="_blank"&gt;Internetwork Consulting&lt;/a&gt;, who pulled the drive from my laptop, and hooked it up to one of his systems while I was having dinner.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;I thought there was probably just a corrupted file&amp;nbsp;on some&amp;nbsp;part of the boot sector, and that it would be&amp;nbsp;easy to pull off my data, buy a new hard drive, install the operating system and software, and then restore my data.&amp;nbsp; Sadly, I was a thousand miles from my backup, and the drive didn't want to give up much of my data.&amp;nbsp; Fortunately I was familiar with a Denver based company called&amp;nbsp;&lt;a title="Contact digitalmedix for help with data recovery on hard drives, camera memory cards, and other devices, and for forensic help as well." href="http://digitalmedix.com/" target="_blank"&gt;digitalmedix&lt;/a&gt;, and spoke the following day with Craig, their COO and President.&amp;nbsp; He said I could FedEx the drive to him then, or bring it in when I returned on Monday.&amp;nbsp; I chose to keep it in my hot little hands and deliver it personally.&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;Monday morning I met with Craig, Jeff, and Brady, in their offices in&amp;nbsp;the basement of a Wells Fargo Bank building.&amp;nbsp; An appropriate place, I think, for the safe keeping and recovery of my important data.&amp;nbsp; Jeff gave me a brief tour, and&amp;nbsp;I was particularly impressed when they had me wait a minute while all monitors were turned off in the recovery area.&amp;nbsp; These people take the privacy of their clients very seriously, and that's a very good thing.&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;Computers with hard drive cables sticking out, some connected to drives, some waiting for them, were neatly stacked on racks covering two of the four walls.&amp;nbsp; There was also a class 100 clean room, which I couldn't enter, where they open up drives, when necessary, to correct mechanical problems.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;In the hallway&amp;nbsp;were racks with thousands of disk drives.&amp;nbsp; These&amp;nbsp;are some of the&amp;nbsp;tools of the trade, used for parts, when necessary, to coax the data from disk drives like mine.&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;Digitalmedix&amp;nbsp;isn't limited&amp;nbsp;to PCs, or even hard drives.&amp;nbsp; Craig also showed me the &amp;quot;special&amp;quot; rack.&amp;nbsp; He told me they've pulled&amp;nbsp;contact information&amp;nbsp;from dead cell phones, and even&amp;nbsp;showed me the charred remains of an answering machine that had some very special messages on it.&amp;nbsp; Digitalmedix also coaxes pictures from camera memory cards, and finds information that's been &amp;quot;erased&amp;quot; from perfectly good working computers.&amp;nbsp; Their experts&amp;nbsp;testify in court as expert witnesses, and preserve the integrity of the evidence they find&amp;nbsp;on the forensic side of the business.&amp;nbsp; These guys are serious problem solvers.&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;I spoke with Craig Sapp, COO and President,&amp;nbsp;about the process and prognosis&amp;nbsp;for recovering my files, and with both Jeff Patrick,&amp;nbsp;VP of sales, and Brady Essman, CEO, about digitalmedix, Blogsites, this article, and&amp;nbsp;the sad story of my hard drive, a story which I sincerely hope will have a&amp;nbsp;happy ending.&amp;nbsp; I'm&amp;nbsp; also&amp;nbsp;hoping that digitalmedix will turn out to be&amp;nbsp;one of my favorite places for data recovery, when all is said and done.&amp;nbsp; Of course, this will depend to some extent on how successful they are at getting my data back.&amp;nbsp; (No pressure guys.) ;-)&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;One of the things I like about digitalmedix, is the fact that if they can't recover your data, there's no charge for the basic evaluation.&amp;nbsp; Digitalmedix offers a 100% service guarantee.&amp;nbsp; The only charge if they can't recover your data would be the cost of parts they needed to try and get your data back.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Other companies I spoke with wanted two or three hundred dollars just to look at the drive.&amp;nbsp; If&amp;nbsp;digitalmedix&amp;nbsp;can retrieve your data, the charges for typical recoveries are between $500.00 and $2000.00 dollars, plus the cost of parts and return media.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;final amount&amp;nbsp;varies&amp;nbsp;based on what it takes&amp;nbsp;to recover your precious data.&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;Craig's preliminary report on my drive indicates that there's a problem on the media itself, that layer of electromagnetic material on the platter of my disk drive where all the ones and zeros are supposed to be &amp;quot;safely&amp;quot; tucked away.&amp;nbsp; Most likely the drive head &amp;quot;crashed&amp;quot; into the platter for some reason and did some damage.&amp;nbsp; Craig is now working his magic, and hopefully I'll know more soon.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; When I know, &lt;a title="Part two of this article on data recovery." href="item/114999" target="_blank"&gt;I'll let you know&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp; In the mean time I'll be saying a few prayers for these guys and the successful recovery of my data.&amp;nbsp; It never hurts to bring in a little extra help. :-)&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;Digitalmedix can be reached at 866-DIG-MEDX, (866-344-6339.)&lt;/p&gt; 
  &lt;p&gt;Internetwork Consulting can be reached at 832-606-3300.&lt;/p&gt;</Description>
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                <Keywords>
                 <Keyword>Brady Essman</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Computer Forensics</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Data Recovery</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Digital Medix</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>File Recovery</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Hard Disk Crash</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>I want my data back</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Internetwork Consulting</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Recovering Lost Data</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>Shawn Zernik</Keyword>

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                  <Title>Shawn Zernik, and his company, Internetwork Consulting are great resources for computer consulting in Houston Texas</Title>

                  <Synopsis>Shawn was a great help to me when I was a thousand miles from my tools and systems.  He went out of his way to make it easy for me to get back to my vacation.</Synopsis>

                  <URL>http://InterNetworkConsulting.net</URL>

        </Link>

                 <Link>
                  <Title>Hard Drive on the open fire.</Title>

                  <Synopsis>A related story on recovering data from a well done hard drive.</Synopsis>

                  <URL>http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1911131,00.asp</URL>

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                  <Title>Part two of this article on Data Recovery</Title>

                  <Synopsis>When the easy solution doesn't cut it, we move to the clean room.</Synopsis>

                  <URL>http://abetterblogsite.com/public/item/114999</URL>

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