If you've just accidentally pressed "delete" and deleted a file on your PC, your first port of call should be to go to the Recycle Bin. If you deleted the file from the "right" place, there's a good chance that your file will be sitting there , waiting for you to click "restore".
But if you didn't delete the file in such a way that it shows in your recycle bin, what next? Is the file lost permanently? It's almost never unimportant, backed-up files that get deleted by accident. Grrrr!
Forunately it's almost always, it's possible to retrieve a file from oblivion. Even if your recycle bin thinks otherwise. This is because the Windows filing system doesn't delete the file but rather it flags the space occupied as something it can use again when it needs to.
The problem is that the more you do on your computer, the higher the chance that Windows will overwrite some or all of the lost file, making recovery difficult or even impossible.
So stop whatever you are doing on your computer. That means stop everything. Including web browsing, looking through your music files, and so on. The more things you do, the higher the chance that Windows will think it can re-use the space you've created by deleting the file.
If you've got access to another computer, use it to download a program like this one to undelete files. If you can't get hold of a different computer then you may get away with using your current PC (especially if you've got a fair amount of free disk space) but only do this as a last resort.
Once you've downloaded a file undelete software program, it's just a matter of following the simple prompts on screen and there's an exceptionally big probability that the software will recover the file you accidentally deleted.
Get your file undelete software here now. It's even got a free trial, you can be 100% sure it will work for you.
Friday, December 26, 2008
How To Undelete A Deleted File
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment