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CD & DVD Data Recovery Capabilities
Home » Data Recovery FAQs » Recovery Capabilities » Removable Media » USB Flash Drives
CD-RW and DVD discs are widely used today for backing up data, creating music discs, sharing files, creating slideshows, and keeping digital copies of home movies. Burned CDs can be read in almost any CD-ROM drive, and DVD burners/players are fast becoming a common sight in many homes. Unfortunately, as is the case with any portable storage, accidents can happen. Some causes of data loss include:
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Common Causes of Data Loss Affecting CD-ROM, CD-R/RW and DVD Discs
- Physical damage to discs (scratches, warped discs)
- Accidentally deleted files (from rewritable discs)
- Virus attacks
- Corrupt file systems
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- Incomplete burns
- Problems with the dye used in burnable/rewriteable discs
- Defective CD or DVD burners
- Defective CD or DVD media
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To start your free CD or DVD data recovery evaluation, click the button below!
Additional Types of Supported Removable Media
- Floppy diskettes in 3.5" format with 720KB & 1.44MB capacities, 5.25" format single- and double-sided to 1.2MB capacity
- CD-ROM, CD-RW, DVD+/-R, DVD+/-RW and DVD-RAM disks
- Syquest 44MB, 88MB and 200MB 5.25" cartridges
- 1.0GB SPARQ and 1.5GB SyJet cartridges
- Imation 120MB SuperDisks
- ORB 2.2GB Cartridges
- Optical Formats for standalone and multi-cartridge Jukebox storage systems:
- ISO 3.5": 128MB, 230MB and 640MB
- GigaMO 3.5" 1.3GB
- ISO 5.25": 650MB, 1.0, 1.2, 2.3, 2.6GB WORM and R/W
- Panasonic 5.25" 1.5GB
- Pinnacle 5.25" 2.6GB and 4.6GB
- Iomega® Zip 100MB, 250MB and 750MB Disks
- Iomega® Bernoulli 44MB, 90MB, 105MB and 150MB 5.25" cartridges
- Iomega® Jaz 1GB and 2GB cartridges
- 230MB and 270MB 3.5" cartridges
- ATA and SRAM FlashCards such as SmartMedia and CompactFlash
- USB keychain drives such as Iomega Mini and Micro Mini USB Drives, M-Systems DiskOnKey drives, Lexar JumpDrives, Trek ThumbDrives and more
Supported Operating Systems, Platforms, and Filesystems
- Windows XP Professional and Home with NTFS, FAT32 or FAT16 file systems using standalone basic partitions or dynamic spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
- Windows 2000 Professional and Server with NTFS, FAT32 or FAT16 file systems using standalone basic partitions or dynamic spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
- Windows NT Workstation and Server with NTFS or FAT16 file systems using standalone, spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
- Windows ME, 98, 95 with FAT32 or FAT16 file systems
- MS-DOS and variants using 12 or 16 bit FAT file systems
- Apple Macintosh:
- OS 9 with HFS and HFS+ file systems
- OS X with HFS, HFS+ and UNIX UFS file systems
- All Macintosh hardware using SCSI, IDE and FireWire interfaces, including software RAID drivers such as SoftRaid and FWB Raid
- Compressed volume managers including Stacker, DoubleSpace and DriveSpace
- OS/2 with FAT and HPFS file systems
- Novell NetWare with FAT and NSS file systems using standalone, spanned, striped or fault-tolerant (RAID) volumes
- UNIX on Intel and Non-Intel platforms, including:
- SCO OpenServer and Xenix
- UnixWare from Novell and SCO
- Solaris on Intel platforms, Sun/SPARC equipment, with UFS and VERITAS VxFS file systems
- Linux with EXT2FS,XFS,REISERFS and JFS file systems on standalone and RAID volumes
- BSD-based systems such as FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD, BSDI, LynxOS
- QNX
- HPUX on Hewlett-Packard workstations with HFS and VERITAS VxFS file systems on standalone and LVMvolumes
- IRIX on SGI workstations with EFS and XFS file systems
- VMS and OpenVMS running on Compaq and DEC equipment using ODS file system
- AIX on IBM RS/6000 with jfs file systems on LVM volume
Iomega's Recovery Process for Removable Media
- Initial diagnosis during our free evaluation determines whether the media is accessible to our lab equipment. If so, the first priority is to create a raw image of the data onto new media so that logical analysis can determine the nature of the data loss situation.
- Logical recovery uses the raw image by examining the low-level data sectors and determining what fixes to filesystem structures are needed to get access to the important data. Sometimes the existing filesystem structures are missing or damaged so much that data has to be extracted directly from one or more fragments of the raw image.
- Our specialists use patented, proprietary software data recovery tools and techniques to analyze and fix problems on removable media. Many of these problems cannot be repaired by any other Data Recovery processes. Once errors have been corrected and data has been recovered, our specialists will strategically examine the data recovered to check data validity.
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