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I do agree entirely with the idea of using the program from a bootable USB stick which could 'get you out of the fertilizer' should your main OS boot drive become corrupted!
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In that way, the PC won't know anything about the program until it's called into use, and because it's on a USB device 'it' won't be writing anything to the disk which is due to be recovered! I should perhaps add that my posting was really intended for those perhaps less 'well-informed' of drive handling, in that I would like Stellar to make the program 'portable' by design, such that it can be kept (inviolate) on a USB stick, and inserted into the PC only when needed - such as in the case of a drive recovery. The 'lost' partition was on a completely separate 4TB drive of which I'd been using just 2TB until then: the problem arose when I had tried to use another utility program to expand the partition out to 3TB, but that had sadly 'gone awry' - leaving me with a drive which was unreadable. In the event, the program is not installed on my OS drive (that's an SSD to which I won't write when testing programs!) but is on my main data drive. I was simply using this 'failed partition expansion' drive as a test of Stellar's capability in recovering from such a catastrophe. What you didn't know was that I did have a duplicate (of the original partition)! Mike, thanks for taking the time to write all that.
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You can also boot to the USB stick you can create with many image backup apps, backup the partition with the lost files, making sure to enable the option to include all free space, because that's where your lost files are, & then later scan that backup, perhaps mounting the VHD, or restoring it to another drive partition etc. Then you might use an OS on a different drive partition to run Stellar Data Recovery Standard, whether that means connecting the drive to another PC or laptop, starting another OS on the same PC if you dual boot, booting the PC or laptop to a Windows 2 Go drive etc. If that's the Windows partition, safest is to turn off the device immediately - don't even shut down Windows. If that's a separate partition from Windows, simply stop writing anything to that partition until recovery's complete. You don't want to write to the drive partition where you lost files.
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If you're running Windows from the partition that you want to recover files from, by the time you find & download Stellar Data Recovery Standard, it may already be too late, making the extra precaution of installing to another drive less meaningful.
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That's because anything written to disk can overwrite the files that you want back, and running Windows & other software means frequently writing to disk. The 2nd best advice is to not store anything on the system partition that you might want to recover if something bad happened. The best advice is to store your stuff in more than one place, so you don't have to recover anything. "However, would it not be sensible for the authors to advise/suggest that this program should be installed onto a USB stick in such a way that it doesn't affect the host PC and which certainly wouldn't risk any installation on the drive which needs rescuing?"
