> I retired last year and, in a spate of demob-happy spring cleaning, > deleted all work-related files (letters, articles, teaching notes, > diagrams, contact addresses and useful URLs) from my PowerMac 5500. Now, > unexpectedly, I find myself being asked to to do some work on an > occasional consultancy basis and am sorely mising a lot of the stuff I so > rashly threw away. Someone, however, has told me that it all must still > exist somewhere in the bowels of my computer. If that is true, can anyone > tell me how to track it down? > > Thanks in anticipation, > Derek Rowntree >
Hi Derek Norton does best when you have been running filesaver in the background. I rate Data rescue as the better for recovery. You want some OTHER place to save recovered files to than your HD though. You may have saved over a lot or a lot of parts of your files though. Data rescue has a demo which can save one file at a time and paying a few dollars opened that up to unlimited. Hope this helps Regards Brian -- PCI-PowerMacs is sponsored by <http://lowendmac.com/> and... Small Dog Electronics http://www.smalldog.com | Refurbished Drives | -- Sonnet & PowerLogix Upgrades - start at $169 | & CDRWs on Sale! | Support Low End Mac <http://lowendmac.com/lists/support.html> PCI-PowerMacs list info: <http://lowendmac.com/lists/pci-powermacs.shtml> --> AOL users, remove "mailto:" Send list messages to: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For digest mode, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subscription questions: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Archive:<http://www.mail-archive.com/pci-powermacs%40mail.maclaunch.com/> Using a Mac? Free email & more at Applelinks! http://www.applelinks.com
