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Hetman Uneraser 3.9 era disponibile come app gratuita il 28 agosto 2017!
Quando il tuo computer all'improvviso si spegne oppure vedi una schermata "blu di morte", il primo pensiero che ti passa per la testa è se il documento su cui stavi lavorando è ancora lì. In caso di un errore minore all'hardware, le tue informazioni sono salve, ma possono verificarsi dei casi peggiori, ed è allora che dovresti iniziare a preoccuparti. Una mancanza di corrente, un attacco da parte di un virus, oppure un errore critico sul tuo hard drive potrebbero interrompere il tuo lavoro per molto tempo e distruggere i tuoi dati.
Hetman Uneraser è stato creato in maniera specifica per queste esigenze. Offrendo una interfaccia semplice simile a quella di Windows Explorer, funziona praticamente con qualsiasi tipi di media moderni e non, come HDD, fotcamere, dispositivi USB, schede di memoria telefono, telefoni cellulari, ZIP e dischi da 3.5". A prescindere dal sistema file in uso - FAT16, FAT32 oppure NTFS - Hetman Uneraser sarà allo stesso modo efficiente come tool di recupero file. Il programma scansiona la posizione desiderata e mostra un elenco ricercabile e selezionabile di file recuperabili, che puoi vedere in anteprima prima di iniziare il processo di cancellazione. Essere in grado di vedere un file in anteprima è una garanzia al 100% della sua recuperabilità.
Ma anche se il file non può essere visto in anteprima, c'è ancora una buona possibilità di essere in grado di recuperare i dati persi. Hetman Uneraser supporta tutti i tipi di file e sarà in grado di recuperare i tuoi file persino dopo la formattazione dell'hard drive.
Maggiori informazioni sul programma disponibili nel video!
Nota bene: il programma comprende una licenza di sei mesi!
Windows 10/ 8/ 7/ 2008 Server/ Vista/ XP/ 2003/ 2000/ NT; 256 MB of RAM; Enough disk space for restoration of files; The administrative privileges are required.
18.5 MB
$18.63
Commenti su Hetman Uneraser 3.9
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
With a product name as specifically enticing as today's, I'm surprised the developer has gone for a domestic home-user audience instead of security and law enforcement agencies.
Forensic recovery of over-written HDD data blocks is a time-consuming and expensive business; electron microscopes ain't cheap. At $18.63 retail, this uneraser of erased data is an astonishing bargain. Even at $1,863 retail it would be sought by all the above-mentioned. Actually: $18,630 would still suit the FBI's budget just fine.
I'm almost tempted to DL and try to unerase that which has been erased from my hard drive. Almost tempted to find, in the wealth of verbiage penned by this developer, a single solitary example of an erased file or folder being recovered by Uneraser 3.9. It's tempting, too, to check out the version history of Uneraser from 1.0 to the present because a product's evolution says everything about its progressive refinement.
Instead though, because I'm short of time, I'll leave the developer to come on here and tell me how $18sworth of software can feasibly attempt what even $100,000sworth of electron deep-scan forensic hardware has no guarantee of achieving.
Meantime, if need arises today for me to recover an inadvertently deleted file or folder from my hard drive, I'll use Piriform's always-free Recuva. It doesn't promise to un-erase anything, but at least seems to manage things rather better than Uneraser 3.9:
"Unfortunately, this program isn't capable of recovering the files you lost after the storage device was damaged or infected, the disk was formatted, or the Recycle Bin's items were deleted." (Ashley Griggs, Software Informer):
http://downloads.informer.com/hetman-uneraser/
Though I take my hat off to Hetman for linking from its own website's "Expert Reviews: Reputed computer publications and data recovery laboratories recommend using our software. See the independent experts' opinion" to a, er, recommendation which demolishes its own product, I'm not going to be able to un-erase from my mind the notion that this software isn't ever going to do what it says on the tin -- and that if it can't even live up to its own self-description, then no 6-month trial is going to alter that.
Thanks, GOTD, and Hetman. But no thanks.
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TK, Only, they did not name it Undelete, did they? they have named it Uneraser which is exactly the point MikeR had made
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Hmm...this thing can't even recover items deleted from the recycle bin? I had a high school coding project that could do that. Should be a fundamental capability for any un-eraser.
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Got ''Installer Integrity Check Failed'' message - never seen that before. Any fix? Also downloaded it from their website but doesn't register with the GOTD key.
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Windows 7 Pro 32-bit.
A note on cleaning up after install:
After installing and closing the program, at first I could not delete Setup.exe and Setup.gcd, a persistent small empty screen kept appearing on my desktop, and, while the program on the taskbar showed itself as running, I could not find it in Task Manager.
After a cold reboot the problem appeared to be solved -- I could delete the two Setup files, and the other indications of the program running had disappeared.
William W. Geertsema
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