Ray Strode wrote:


When you start the machine, it will come up to the C:\ prompt, and
the directory listing shows COMMAND.COM and a couple of other
hidden/archive/read-only files.

Sounds to me like "format C: /s" was typed.

Don't know how to help tho, sorry.

If I'm not mistaken , unless the /q options is used, the drive is zero'd
sector by sector, so I think this is a tougher problem then one might
expect. --Ray


If the drive was indeed zeroed sector by sector, there's virtuall NO WAY a software solution is going to get it back. Fortunately, just writing nulls isn't the most effective way of erasing data: the drive can't see it as it sees the nulls, but a person using specilized equipment can essentially "mask out" the nulls and see what used to be underneath it. Obviously this requires that you have not written anything more to that area. Unfortunately, this service isn't cheap as it requires highly skilled operators on very expensive equipment (can you say Electron Microscope and the op reading the bits by hand?), but if the data was REALLY important to you, it can be recovered.

If the /q option was specified, turn that box off NOW and put the hdd in a linux box (dos/windows won't work as it will automagically "mount" it read/write). You can then use a hex editor and follow the old filesystem (I think FAT stores a few backup FATs someplace) and extract the needed data by hand that way. There are probably tools to automate this for you.

--Monmotha

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