Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 9 years ago
Hi itbelink,
if you say you can't move or copy the file on or from your USB stick you mean
that
you see the file in explorer but you can't manage the file within explorer
(supposed
you are using Windows)?
If this is true then your chances are not good because your stick might have
failed
maybe even just in one bit during your last write off. The fact that the file
was
saved successfully does not mean anything as windws is not verifying what it
writes.
It finds about write errors only during read operations (that's when the shit
has
already happened and it's too late) or if it comes to hard errors like a dead
disk.
This is something even Windows takes note of. The size of your file is not an
issue
here. 1 MB is not much for KeyNote.
If your encrypted file has been hit by just one failed bit this is enough to
render
it completely unrecoverable.
The alternative ways to get acess to a file normaly make only sense if it is
not
encrypted and if it has not been damaged too hard:
1. make an image of the drive before you go on.
2. run a data recovery tool of your choice and try to copy the visible file via
that
tool. The file access works in a different way then through explorer.
3. you might also run a chkdsk against the affected drive to find if there are
any
errors detected.
But all this will not get your file back if it was encrypted and placed on the
wrong
spot.
Original comment by stati...@gmx.net
on 18 Dec 2009 at 5:38
Thank you for the explanation. That sounds right and makes sense.
Unfortunately, I
decided to run the chkdsk yesterday after reading some other information from
other
forums. Chkdsk fixed the corruption to the point I could copy it to another
drive,
but unfortunately it must have ruined the encryption or something because now
keynotes completely doesn't recognize it. I've tried copying it over and
opening it
on another computer, but nothing has worked. Yeah, I goofed.
At this point I'm kind of giving up and counting my losses, unless there are any
other suggestions that might work. I wish I would have waited and just went
with the
suggestions above. Hopefully my mistake will help others with some insight
though.
Original comment by itbelink@gmail.com
on 18 Dec 2009 at 5:59
Hello itbelink
I know it has been a long time since your issue report.. Anyway I would like to
confirm what staticp indicated to you, and recomend you to use the backup
options
that KeyNote offers. Of course, it is also always convenient to make regularly a
backup to a different place.
That is something common to the use of any program but specially when then
document
is encrypted or compressed.
I hope you could recover most of your work
Regards
Original comment by dpra...@gmail.com
on 30 May 2010 at 3:54
Hi dpradov,
Yes I had made backups, but unfortunately my other drive I backed up to failed
on me
(hardware failure). One of those freak accidents where both the original AND
the
backup fail. Extremely extremely rare, but happens. I just had some really
really bad
luck that day! I luckily was backing up every 2 weeks, so I still had a
previous
backup around 3-4 weeks prior. So I lost everything I had done in 3-4 weeks,
which
was actually quite a bit, which is why I was hoping for a recovery.
This is just one of those things that happens with technology, so can't do much
about
it. Feel free to close this thread, I don't think there's anything left to
do.
Thanks for trying!
Original comment by itbelink@gmail.com
on 4 Jun 2010 at 3:22
Hello, really you had bad luck, but on the other hand it isn't so strange..
(Murphy's
law)
Original comment by dpra...@gmail.com
on 4 Jun 2010 at 10:11
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
itbelink@gmail.com
on 17 Dec 2009 at 4:44