At 10/20/2005 08:34 AM, Noel Stoutenburg wrote:

>David W. Fenton wrote:
>
>>If an undelete program that works like the one I have were free and
>>worked as well (no performance penalty and complete stability), would
>>you use it?
>
>I'm always willing to look at something, whether a change in procedure,
>or acquisition of a new software item that will reduce the margin of
>error even further.  But as I write this, I don't remember having ever
>had the need to make use of either an autosave, or a backup file for
>recovery purposes.  Futher, I don't understand exactly what the undelete
>program you mention does, or how it does it.

It's a "super" trash bin.

Instead of only storing user deleted files, it stores programmatically deleted files, overwritten files, etc. Every file that somehow gets changed on a system, gets a copy stored in the super trash bin.

For instance, if you have autosave on for 2 minutes, every 2 minutes another copy of your work is saved in the super trash bin.

Phil Daley          < AutoDesk >
http://www.conknet.com/~p_daley



_______________________________________________
Finale mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale

Reply via email to