Active Data
Recovery's software is a straightforward, unassuming utility that doesn’t
resort to a lot of flashy graphics and follows the Windows Explorer standard
interface fairly closely, so it’s familiar and easy to get to grips with.
The application window is split into three panes: a vertical directory tree
on the left, a file view at top right and a tabbed pane at bottom right.
Advertisement
This has tabs for a log of the actions of Undelete; a properties view that
shows the properties of any file selected in the file view; a search results
pane, a disk hex editor that allows direct viewing and editing of data bytes
within a selected file; plus a drag-and-drop pane where you can drag any file
from the upper file pane for recovery.
On initialisation Active@ Undelete shows a drive list in the directory tree
view; a device list in the file view and start activity in the log view. It also
recognises and identifies all storage devices present.
To get started you need to select a storage device and then select simple or
advanced scan from the pop-up. A simple scan of our test machine took about two
minutes for a 38GB volume.
Active@ Undelete can recover deleted and formatted data from hard drives,
floppy disks, basic and dynamic volumes, hardware or software Raid (levels 0 and
5).
Compressed, encrypted and fragmented files are supported. Besides hard disk
drives and floppies, recovery from removable devices such as SD, CF, Smartmedia,
Memory Stick, zip drives, USB hard drives and so on is also supported.
There’s an evaluation version to download, which has full functionality but
is limited to a maximum of 64KB file size.
An Enterprise Edition is also available with advanced capabilities to access
and perform data recovery on remote machines; it supports data recovery from
other Raid configurations: spanned, mirrored (Raid 1), striped (Raid 0) and Raid
5 volumes.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article