One of the features of Gparted, the linux partition editor program, is that it 
is ubiquitous. It is available as a stand alone livecd facility, or as an 
installable program with just about every distribution.  There is a little 
known benefit function that is buried in the layers of menus.

First of all, if your flash drive is corrupted, it will be mounted, when you 
plug it, but not necessarily readable. (typically mounted in   /media  )

If drive is corrupted, it will be seen as a RO, which is what you want it to be 
if you plan recovery.

To perform a recovery, proceed and open the Partition menu and select the check 
entry.  It will call the appropriate linux check utility.  For me this was 
wonderful, as I had a flash drive that was not readable.  And I had a hard disk 
backup drive 512gig that was half full, that also failed. 

Well, Gparted allows you to unmount a drive and it still shows in the list. It 
then allows a check to be performed.  

In my case, running Partition --> check      two times in succession fully 
recovered my external hard disk. In a scan, there were some very few entries 
that were in the subdirectories twice. (fewer then 6). Manual corrections were 
done.

Gparted makes life easy as it saves time (and thinking :)  )

Wierd though, I was running Pidgin, the MSN alternative, and with it running, 
flash drives did not want to mount.  Canning Pidgin worked.

Leslie

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