Do to the lack of knowledge and impatience I formatted the drive.  I now have looked 
at a couple recovery tools out there but they run around $75.. ouch.  I will bite the 
bullet and get one I guess.  Here is the question, once that the information is 
recover will the application be able to read the file again or does the file have to 
be reassembled by a third party?  I friend said that recovery is not a probable, 
reassembling the information in a order so the application can read it is another 
thing.  I have no idea on this, what is your thoughts?

Stephen

-----Original Message-----
From: Ansgar Wiechers [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2003 6:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Digital Evidence Question - What is an effective Windows
hard -disk search tool?


On 2003-06-18 Gene LeDuc wrote:
>> It funny that this discussion started in the last few days..  As
>> Murphy would have it, last night while installing a new nic card.
>> Something happened to the boot.ini file and corrupted it. I don't
>> know how or why except the possibility of it writing to the boot.ini
>> file the nic information.  I don't think that this information is
>> stored in the boot.ini file but maybe.  Anyway the problem I ran into
>> is that the win would not load and I couldn't recover it.  (No safe
>> mode, no fixboot, no fixmbr, nothing)  I figured I would just overlay
>> an OS on top of the old one and then recover the information, no luck
>> the process would not perform unless I format.  Great...  If you know
>> what I mean.  I have been researching free tools to recover lost data
>> but no real luck in a software that performs properly.  I was
>> wondering if anyone has/knows of one.  Looking to recover my office
>> files - *.xls, *.pst file and *.doc files.
> 
> If all you want to do is recover the info, you can attach the hard
> drive to a linux box and mount the NTFS partition.  From that point
> you can browse the NTFS file system and copy any files you want.
> Depending on the flavor and version of linux, you may have to load an
> NTFS driver; I believe sourceforge has a read-only driver.  If you
> don't have a linux box hanging around then I suppose you could also
> attach the drive to another MS box and access it natively.

Most distributions provide (read-only-)access to NTFS out of the box,
since it is part of the official kernel. The only exception I know of is
RedHat (you have to install the driver yourself there).
If you don't happen to have a Linux box you could try tomsrtbt [1] which
runs from a single floppy disk. With another harddisk in the box you can
easily copy the files you want to preserve onto the second harddisk. Use
FAT32 as filesystem for the second harddisk so it will be read- and
writable from Windows as well as from Linux.

[1] http://www.toms.net/rb/

Best regards
Ansgar Wiechers

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