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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Accessing info on disk I recently copied word documents to disc. It copied correctly. Now I cannot access the info on the disc because the original file/shortcut was deleted from my computer. Can anyone help me with this so I don't lose all my documents. |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Accessing info on disk On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 19:46:42 -0800, Girlystevedave <Girlystevedave@xxxxxx> wrote: Quote: > I recently copied word documents to disc. It copied correctly. Now I cannot > access the info on the disc because the original file/shortcut was deleted > from my computer. Can anyone help me with this so I don't lose all my > documents. What does "to disc" mean? What are you calling a "disc"? Hard drive? Floppy disk? CD? DVD? Exactly how did you do the copy and from where did you copy these documents? Please tell us the exact verbatim text of the message you get when you try to access the files on the "disc." It's hard to be sure based on the little information you're supplied, but my guess is that you may have copied shortcuts to the files, not the files themselves, then deleted the original files. If that guess is correct, your only recourse is recovering the deleted documents from the original hard drive. First try the recycle bin. If that doesn't work, read on. "Deleting" a file doesn't actually delete it; it just marks the space as available to be used. There are third-party programs that can sometimes recover deleted files. The problem is that the space used by the file is likely to become overwritten very quickly, and this makes the file unrecoverable. So your chances of successfully recovering this file are decent if you try recovering it immediately after deleting it, and rapidly go downhill from there. If you've been using the computer since then (for example to write this question and read this answer), your chances may be very poor by now. But if the file is important enough, it's worth a try anyway. Stop using the computer in question immediately, if you haven't done so already. Download an undelete program (here's one: http://www3.telus.net/mikebike/RESTORATION.html but there are several others to choose from; do a Google search) on a friend's computer and bring it to yours on a floppy to try. If this fails, your only other recourse is to take the drive to a professional file recovery company. This kind of service is very expensive and may or may not work in your case. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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