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[ # ] Zero Assumption Recovery
June 7th, 2007 under InfoSec, Technology, Review, rvincoletto, Software, Sponsored

Problems with your Hard Drive? Lost all your pictures in your memory card? There’s still a chance.

Zero Assumption Recovery (or ZAR Recovery) is a tool to recover lost data in a drive unit. The best thing with this tool is you don’t need to be a computer expert to use it. It’s easy to use and all process can be done automatically.

How to use it:

  1. Selecting a drive to recover:
  2. Selecting a volume to process:
  3. Analysing a volume:
  4. Choosing files to recover:

Things you can do with Zero Assumption Recovery:

  1. Recover FAT16, FAT32 and NTFS.
  2. Copy a hard drive sector by sector.
  3. Or, insert 0’s (zero) in all sectors. (This one is for those that don’t want to recovery anything, if you know what I mean)
  4. There are some new features as RAD0 and RAID5 support and experimental support for Linux ext2.

Demo version limitations:

      - You can recover just 4 folders
      - You can record the information scanned in drive unit, but you can load it again.

Zero Assumption Recovery is a tool really great for professional and amateurs photographers (like me), because it can recover digital pictures from you memory stick.

Zero Assumption Recovery works with several memory card formats (CompactFlah, MemoryStick, SmartMedia, etc), since they can be opened by operating system. Supports several file formats: GIF, JPEG, TIFF, CRW, MOV, WAV.

It has a friendly interface, self-explanatory, step-by-step, to help you with the best solution for your problem.


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Zero Assumption Recovery

Popularity: 15% [?]

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