Why You Choose us
for Data Recovery ?
We have ten years data recovery experience. While other
companies have been operating for one or two years, we have the experience of
many years in the industry and therefore more experience with the hundreds of
ways a hard disk may fail, We recover data for data recovery companies.
(Various data recovery companies send the work when they are unable to do that)
Hard drive data recovery and hard drive
repair are something that should not be left to the inexperienced. To proceed
with file recovery from a hard drive or hard disk, there are certain steps that should always be taken. We at ATCS ONLINE have the experience to know what
the noises mean (or what they do not mean if the drive is silent) when a hard
drive is knocking, clicking or clunking, or not detecting in BIOS. We are able
to temporarily repair your hard drive to find the lost data
So dear it’s the time to take action and send us the
drive today for Data Recovery
Data recovery is the process of salvaging data from damaged, failed, corrupted, or inaccessible secondary storage media when it cannot be accessed normally. Often the data are being salvaged from storage media such as hard disk drives, storage tapes, CDs, DVDs, RAID, and other electronics. Recovery may be required due to physical damage to the storage device or logical damage to the file system that prevents it from being mounted by the host operating system.
The most common "data recovery" scenario involves an operating system (OS) failure (typically on a single-disk, single-partition,
single-OS system), in which case the goal is simply to copy all wanted
files to another disk. This can be easily accomplished with a Live CD, most of which provide a means to mount the system drive and backup disks or removable media, and to move the files from the system disk to the backup media with a file manager or optical disc authoring software. Such cases can often be mitigated by disk partitioning and consistently storing valuable data files (or copies of them) on a different partition from the replaceable OS system files.
Another scenario involves a disk-level failure, such as a compromised file system or disk partition or a hard disk failure.
In any of these cases, the data cannot be easily read. Depending on the
situation, solutions involve repairing the file system, partition table
or master boot record,
or hard disk recovery techniques ranging from software-based recovery
of corrupted data to hardware replacement on a physically damaged disk.
If hard disk recovery is necessary, the disk itself has typically failed
permanently, and the focus is rather on a one-time recovery, salvaging
whatever data can be read.
In a third scenario, files have been "deleted"
from a storage medium. Typically, deleted files are not erased
immediately; instead, references to them in the directory structure are
removed, and the space they occupy is made available for later
overwriting. In the meantime, the original file may be restored.
Although there is some confusion over the term, "data recovery" may also
be used in the context of forensic applications or espionage.
Data Back UP In Information Technology, a backup or the process of backing up refers to making copies of data so that these additional copies may be used to restore the original after a data loss event. The verb form is back up in two words, whereas the noun is backup (often used like an adjective in compound nouns).[1]
Backups have two distinct purposes. The primary purpose is to recover
data as a reaction to data loss, be it by data deletion or corrupted data. Data loss is a very common experience of computer users. 67% of internet users have suffered serious data loss.
The secondary purpose of backups is to recover data from a historical period of time within the constraints of a user-defined data retention
policy, typically configured within a backup application for how long
copies of data are required. Though backups popularly represent a simple
form of disaster recovery, and should be part of a disaster recovery plan, by themselves, backups should not alone be considered disaster recovery.
Not all backup systems and/or backup applications are able to
reconstitute a computer system, or in turn other complex configurations
such as a computer cluster, active directory servers, or a database server, by restoring only data from a backup.
Since a backup system contains at least one copy of all data worth saving, the data storage
requirements are considerable. Organizing this storage space and
managing the backup process is a complicated undertaking. A data
repository model can be used to provide structure to the storage. In the
modern era of computing there are many different types of data storage devices
that are useful for making backups.
There are also many different ways
in which these devices can be arranged to provide geographic redundancy,
data security, and portability.
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