Pause. Catch breath. Repeat.

Jun 26, 2008 22:00

Kim and I got back from a 1 1/2 week trip yesterday night. Today was spent busily doing laundry, paying bills, and otherwise catching up on work and personal stuff. And tomorrow morning, we head back out of town for another 1 1/2 week trip. It's a busy chunk of summer, but we're still enjoying it.

I've already sketched out our schedule in a ( Read more... )

busy, travel

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Comments 6

jon_leonard June 27 2008, 06:17:27 UTC
I'd probably try to attach the memory card to a computer, do a raw copy of the card to something on the computer, and then try to do filesystem recovery on that. (They use the old MS-DOS filesystem.) Depending on how much you want the photos and your tolerance for frustrating computer experiences, of course.

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steuard June 27 2008, 13:43:37 UTC
What's a good tool for a raw copy of an unmountable disk device on a Mac? :) And for that matter, know any good free disk recovery utilities that might work? I'm pretty much a novice at this sort of thing.

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jon_leonard June 29 2008, 04:54:28 UTC
You probably have dd available to you. Or even cat. For disk recovery on a mac ... dunno. You might have an appropriate version of fsck available. Beth says that the disk recovery program she bought might work. (not free, no.) How urgent is it? How much do you care if you lose the data?

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steuard June 29 2008, 15:54:07 UTC
My very brief attempt to use dd before we left didn't go anywhere, but that may have just been a lack of familiarity with the tool. (I got some sort of read error when doing a naive redirect of /dev/disk1 to a storage file, I think, and I didn't have time to go hunting through the man page for details.) On the other hand, it's also possible that the camera itself is refusing access to what it views as an unformatted memory card.

The level of urgency is fairly low (I presumably have until the next time I want to use the camera, anyway), and I've already reconciled myself to losing the data, so any chance of recovery at this point will feel like an unexpected bonus. Also, it looks like we may be able to (eventually) test whether it's the card or the camera that's at fault: Kim's mother has a printer that can read xD cards directly, so we could try plugging it in there and see what happens.

In any case, we won't be able to do a thing until we get back from this trip, as the camera is currently resting at home in LA. :)

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zathrus June 27 2008, 15:21:36 UTC
As one novice speaking to another.... I can't tell you anything about data recovery software or the likes, but I can tell you that when we had a hard drive crash right before J was born, we had very good luck paying someone else to struggle with all that for us. :) We found a guy who ran a computer fix-it business on the side, during evenings and weekends, and were very satisfied with the results. Of course, for just a camera card, it might not be worth it, but then, the same is true of struggling with software and frustrating computers.

Newt

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