I have a friend whose external hard drive took a dump. It's not the USB circuitry as I pulled the disk out and tried it through another interface, so it's either the drive circuitry or the physical drive itself. The data at risk is worth more than anything I have lost (my friend has kids and a camera, so we're talking about family photos that would actually be missed), but the budget is lower than when I've worked with data forensics experts of the testifying sort. So I'm trying to get a referral to the best bang for the buck on data recovery in this situation.
All PIREPs appreciated. The drive is boxed up and ready to ship out. Thanks in advance!
Happened to me a while back. Kotar data recovery in San Jose
https://www.kotar.us got it back for me. Very pricy, but very happy with the results. Very grateful that Kotar was able to get the data back. They provided a new drive which was essentially a clone of the dead drive. They had to go in to the old drive and replace readwrite heads, rebuild firmware, and other magic. Mr. Kotar was an engineer in the disk drive industry for years, so he knows his stuff. Cost about $1,200 or so to get the data back.
Getting a good backup strategy was always in the "I need to get started in that some day soon" category, but I procrastinated too long. The scare caused me to remedy that. Now, my data is on dual mirrored drives in the PC which back up to:
1. Another hard drive in the PC
2. A 4-drive, RAID 10 NAS on my LAN
3. The cloud
The PC system drive is an SSD which also backs up to the inboard hard drive, the NAS, and the cloud.
The 4 drive NAS contains other data and backs up to a 2-drive RAID 1 NAS locally and also to an offsite Backblaze cloud server.
I never want to deal with the terror of potentially losing pictures, tax records, etc. ever again.
I use Acronis for my PC backup and Synology's HyperBackup for the NAS. I've also got a cloud sync option to snchronize some of the NAS files to Dropbox.
I figure that with the various RAIDs, nightly backups, Dropbox Syncs, and multiple backup locations both local and cloud, my data is pretty safe from most conceivable losses. Multuple drives in multiple placea would have to fail to permanently lose data.
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