Lacie Hard Drive Error Performing Inpage Operation
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• FAQ • VIEW ALL • PRINT • NEXT >> • Case of the Missing Hard Drive by Wendall Woodbury on Apr 12, 2009 at 3:23:16 am This Easter weekend I am 're-capturing' 33 hours of video to an editing project I
Error Performing Inpage Operation Cd Rom
have spent several months creating. It all began...in Premiere Pro CS3, where I carefully backed error performing inpage operation cd drive up all 6 projects (which will become 'chapters' in a 50 minute program.) The one thing I did NOT do was back up
Inpage Mfc Application Has Stopped Working
the Western Digital 'My Book' 5oo gb external (Y:) drive, which held all of my imported footage (and which was very full!) A couple of hours before completion of the entire project the external drive disappeared, when I http://www.tomsguide.com/forum/238880-49-error-performing-inpage-operation booted up. It was there in the line-up, but would not load any files. Here's the crazy part, it still acts normal, that is, I can hear it spinning (quiet as usual, no noises) and the blue light says it's functioning properly. It showed up with all the rest of the drives, but when I first tried opening it I kept getting 'Y:is not acessible. Error Performing Inpage Operation'. After many hours of searching forums (including the https://forums.creativecow.net/thread/3/891650 Cow) I learned a few tricks, which I tried. Such as: 1. Start > Run > type in cmd then click OK to get a command prompt. 2. Type in chkdsk y: /r That check ran fine, and it allowed me to at least open the drive up, but alas no files appeared...none. I tried running the same pgm again, but then I got a message saying 'Cannont Open Volume For Direct Access'. I then checked the Y: drive ‘properties’ and it says the harddrive has O used space and O free space & capacity O bytes. I tired running tools 'error checking', but of course nothing happened. I also purchased ‘Recover My Files’, but that did nothing, although it appears to be a good program for recovering regular deleted files. (The program did not recognize my F: drive in its line-up, so it could not look for files to recover.) I've tried using different USB & Firewire cables, on two computers, to no avail. When I tried to de-frag the Y: drive it was not on the list of drives, so I could not try defragging. The drive was probably too full to degrag anyway. And, that may be part of the problem. Oh yes, somewhere in this process I got "windows was unable to save all the data for the file Y:Mft. The data was lost..." And
employ in the real world to deal with real problems. They might be wrong or dangerous. They might be inefficient. If you try them yourself, it http://html5.litten.com/updated-how-to-fix-external-disk-drive-suddenly-became-raw/ might cause damage or irreparable loss. I take no responsibility for anything http://www.yqcomputer.com/1015_278_1.htm you do based on my examples or the information that I provide here. I recommend this device for connecting a boot drive to another computer or if you need to remove an external drive from a broken enclosure. You can use the software that comes with it or use the error performing free software linked in my guide below. ALWAYS CHECK THE DRIVE FOR PHYSICAL PROBLEMS FIRST as I describe below in the section "Accessing and Assessing a Hard Drive’s S.M.A.R.T. Data to Determine if There is Physical Damage" I hope this helps you, James It has been well over a year since last updating my post on ‘Recovering an external hard drive that has error performing inpage suddenly become RAW' and there have been some significant changes. PartedMagic is no longer free Hard drives larger than 500GB have become commonplace TestDisk has become even better Many many many comments from people have been posted that show common problems that are not directly addressed by the original post. So with all of that in mind, here is a revised version that hopefully addresses some of the shortomings of the post that was originally released in January of 2013. A common and befuddling problem with computers is the sudden and seemingly inexplicable disappearance of an external hard drive that has been functioning properly. It can be a breathtaking experience to suddenly be told that your data, often irreplaceable pictures and documents, might be gone forever. As with many similar situations in life the appropriate response is "Don't panic". When approached sensibly and carefully, the situation can be resolved and the data saved more times than not. Here we will look at the causes, fixes and preventative measures for instances involving external drives being used with Windows XP and Windows Vista/7/8. Error Messages Common error messages as
Backup? What brand of drives? Does SBS 2003 back up work with external USB 2.0 hard drives? Cheers Michael Top External USB 2.0 Hard Drive for Backup by Russ » Wed, 03 Mar 2004 16:21:12 Well from Previous Posts looks like EVERYONE is using one except me. I've just Ordered a Case to hold a Hard Drive for that purpose. (It arrives Thursday) Russ Top External USB 2.0 Hard Drive for Backup by Dare » Wed, 03 Mar 2004 16:32:13 Hey Mik I run a Lacie Usb2 drive perfectly for backups Cheers Daren Top External USB 2.0 Hard Drive for Backup by Jmio » Wed, 03 Mar 2004 23:21:39 Mike, I use 2 Pine USB 2.0 drives for my backup, a nightly backup, and a weekly off-site backup. The only trouble was that I was unable to initialize and format the drives on the SBS server. I had to initialize on a Win 2000 client machine, then attach the drives to the server. J Mio message Top External USB 2.0 Hard Drive for Backup by Dave Nicka » Thu, 04 Mar 2004 00:20:03 My boss uses an Iomega for his desktop and laptop. He loves it. The only negative is price - their portable drives (as opposed to the external desktop drives) are pretty expensive. He ghosts the drives, then does incremental file backups of My Docs and other data directories. IMO the negative to using these devices for backup is offsite availability. I rotate 14 days worth of backup tapes off site, so I always have at least 11-12 days offsite plus the oldest 2-3 days here. With USB, if you use a desktop device they're not designed to be hauled around, so you risk data loss when it bounces off the car seat. The portables like my boss uses will survive the car, but at $250+ each you probably won't have a lot of them offsite. (I buy 15 DDS tapes a year per server, at a cost of about $150 - the same neighborhood as one USB drive). I'm considering devising some kind of plan where I would ghost the server to an external device overnight instead of a tape backup. Then I would t