Home & Garden50 mins ago
Accessing the D Drive
5 Answers
Alright, so I took my computer in to have the left speaker replaced and the people who were fixing it, without my knowing, wiped my hard drive. Since I never imagined they would have a reason to do so, I lost all of my files on my computer that I never backed up.... psd files, flash files, etc.
Now... they did a REALLY shoddy job of wiping my computer as I found a bunch of program remnants in my C drive and some really random stuff the wipe never hit.
My question is, if I am able to access the D drive (the recovery drive) would I find backups of some of my files? If so... how do I access the drive?
Now... they did a REALLY shoddy job of wiping my computer as I found a bunch of program remnants in my C drive and some really random stuff the wipe never hit.
My question is, if I am able to access the D drive (the recovery drive) would I find backups of some of my files? If so... how do I access the drive?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If they really did wipe your hard drive that is AWFUL. No excuse what soever for that.
Check to make sure it still has the same hard drive.
If they are a dodgy company they may have removed your large hard drive and replaced it with a small one.
I hope you did not pay them for the privilage of having your hard drive wiped !!!
Check to make sure it still has the same hard drive.
If they are a dodgy company they may have removed your large hard drive and replaced it with a small one.
I hope you did not pay them for the privilage of having your hard drive wiped !!!
What's sad is that I had to pay them to back up my files.... but they failed to do so and neglected to tell me.
Now I have to pay half of the backup fee for their "attempt to back up my files".
-sighs-
I know it's the same hard drive just because, like I said up there, I have all of my programs remnants and some of my old files on my C drive still (it was a really shoddy wipe).
so I'm still working on a solution to getting into my supposedly (by my computer's standards) inacessible D drive to see if I can't recover some of those files.
Now I have to pay half of the backup fee for their "attempt to back up my files".
-sighs-
I know it's the same hard drive just because, like I said up there, I have all of my programs remnants and some of my old files on my C drive still (it was a really shoddy wipe).
so I'm still working on a solution to getting into my supposedly (by my computer's standards) inacessible D drive to see if I can't recover some of those files.
why are you even thinking of paying them? .... I'd be looking for compensation.
"attempting" to backup a drive is ridiculous .... you back it up .... and verify it - it's not hit and miss ... and it's not rocket science
.... you either have or you haven't. - it's easily proved
if you haven't .... you don't start the other work ... what's hard about that?
"attempting" to backup a drive is ridiculous .... you back it up .... and verify it - it's not hit and miss ... and it's not rocket science
.... you either have or you haven't. - it's easily proved
if you haven't .... you don't start the other work ... what's hard about that?
Yep - don't pay them! If you've paid them, demand a refund for the failed back-up (which they obviously didn't do) and you would be within your rights to demand compensation for the damage they did to your machine.
I'm having a hard time seeing how they managed to wipe the drive whilst replacing a speaker - is it an all-in-one or (shudder) a Mac?
I'm having a hard time seeing how they managed to wipe the drive whilst replacing a speaker - is it an all-in-one or (shudder) a Mac?