On Mon, 11 Jan 2010 15:15:37 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> So it is. Looks like 11:51 is still too early in the morning.
If it's morning, it's too early :)
--
Neil Bothwick
WYTYSYDG - What you thought you saw, you didn't get.
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
On Monday 11 January 2010 13:27:30 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Jan 2010 11:51:20 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > > The MP3 files probably have ID3 tags containing artist, album and
> > > > title information, so it should be possible to use a script to
> > > > rename them (Goggle will most
On Mon, 11 Jan 2010 11:51:20 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > The MP3 files probably have ID3 tags containing artist, album and
> > > title information, so it should be possible to use a script to
> > > rename them (Goggle will most likely turn up a few options).
> >
> > Looks like audiotag c
On Sunday 10 January 2010 12:00:40 Adam wrote:
> > The MP3 files probably have ID3 tags containing artist, album and title
> > information, so it should be possible to use a script to rename them
> > (Goggle will most likely turn up a few options).
>
> Looks like audiotag can do that
Hm. Its webs
> The MP3 files probably have ID3 tags containing artist, album and title
> information, so it should be possible to use a script to rename them
> (Goggle will most likely turn up a few options).
Looks like audiotag can do that, here's a snip of the help;
--rename-filesrename fi
On 9 Jan 2010, at 22:33, Peter Humphrey wrote:
...
However you might use this as a backup image of your starting
point, to
give you multiple chances at repairing the fs using different
approaches.
Now I'm running out of space to store the data in.
Invest in storage. Doing so will make yo
On Saturday 09 January 2010 19:47:33 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> The MP3 files probably have ID3 tags containing artist, album and title
> information, so it should be possible to use a script to rename them
> (Goggle will most likely turn up a few options).
That's a good idea - thanks.
On Saturday 09 January 2010 19:27:37 Stroller wrote:
> I _believe_ that if you leave the USB drive, with the corrupt
> filesystem, plugged in when the laptop boots, then during the boot
> process the `chkdsk` will be performed.
Unfortunately not. I was hoping so too, but when I tried it I got the
On Sat, 9 Jan 2010 16:49:50 +, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Other than that I think we're into a file recovery mode involving
> > tools like photorec and dd_rescue.
>
> Photorec is what I've used to extract a few thousand files - the ones I
> mentioned with the unhelpful names.
The MP3 files
On 9 Jan 2010, at 16:49, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Saturday 09 January 2010 12:34:26 Mick wrote:
...
It resets the ntfs journal and when the drive is booted into
MSWindows
it'll run a chkdsk - make sure you do not interrupt this!
The disk in question is an external USB disk.
In your friend
On Saturday 09 January 2010 12:34:26 Mick wrote:
> I have tried ntfsfix.
That's a new one to me - thanks.
> It resets the ntfs journal and when the drive is booted into MSWindows
> it'll run a chkdsk - make sure you do not interrupt this!
The disk in question is an external USB disk.
> In your
On Saturday 09 January 2010 11:48:35 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Does anyone here know of a tool that can rebuild an NTFS directory
> structure? I've tried several tools I found with Google, but the only one
> that had any success has extracted hundreds of small text files and lots of
> mp3 and other
Hello list,
Someone not far from here has yanked his USB disk out of his computer once
too often, without unmounting it, and now the whole disk is shown as off-line
and inaccessible by his WinXP system. I'm trying to recover his data for
him, which is mostly music files.
Does anyone here know
13 matches
Mail list logo