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New computer forensic tools will make it possible to recover more data from corrupted hard drives so long as the missing filles haven't been overwritten.
Finding criminal data on cell phones and game consoles is tough
Tools designed to harvest images from disks even after they have been deleted from the file system can be adapted to seek other file formats including Word documents, says Nasir Memon, a professor at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University.
In research that he hasn't yet published, Memon says will show that techniques used to cull images can be adapted to find text files, a capability that would be attractive to businesses trying to salvage data that may be fragmented and dispersed across a corrupted drive.
The text tool will examine fragmented chunks of files that may be distributed across a disk and analyze their content to see which ones likely go together. "It looks at global differences, for example, Twain vs. Shakespeare. Syntax helps eliminate false positives," Memon says.
Source -
New forensic tools to advance data recovery - Computerworld
My Computer
At a glance
Win 7 Ultimate 64-bit. SP1.Intel i7 -720QM.[1.6GHz Turbo Boost 2.8GHz. 6...8 DDR 3 RAM. 1066MHZATI 1024 MB. DDR3. Radeon HD5650
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- LAPTOP. HP Pavilion dv7-4010TX .
- OS
- Win 7 Ultimate 64-bit. SP1.
- CPU
- Intel i7 -720QM.[1.6GHz Turbo Boost 2.8GHz. 6MB Cache.]
- Memory
- 8 DDR 3 RAM. 1066MHZ
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI 1024 MB. DDR3. Radeon HD5650
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 17.3" High Definition Brightview LCD. LED Backlit.
- Screen Resolution
- 1600 x 900.
- Hard Drives
- 640GB
- Case
- Laptop / notebook.
- Mouse
- Logitech Anywhere mouse. MX.
- Internet Speed
- ADSL [ but too slow ]
