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Recovering Secret HD Space

An anonymous reader writes "Just browsing hardocp.com and noticed a link to this article. 'The Inquirer has posted a method of getting massive amounts of hard drive space from your current drive. Supposedly by following the steps outlined, they have gotten 150GB from an 80GB EIDE drive, 510GB from a 200GB SATA drive and so on.' Could this be true? I'm not about to try with my hard drive." Needless to say, this might be a time to avoid the bleeding edge. (See Jeff Garzik's warning in the letters page linked from the Register article.)

15 of 849 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Uh, no by Froggert · · Score: 5, Funny

    No you fool, don't tell them yet! This is all part of my incredibly ingenious plan to get all the script kiddies and spammers in the world to follow these instructions to "enlarge" their three inch hard disks and corrupt all of their data in the process. Nobody remotely knowledgeable about computers would ever believe this, and nobody who knows nothing about computers would possibly attempt to do this. Who does this leave? Yes, the script kiddies and spammers. Now it's back to Plan B, sharks with frickin' laser beams on their heads.

    --
    What, me worry?
  2. Enlarge your HardDrive by thefatz · · Score: 5, Funny

    Gain upto 300-600 more gigs. Your lover will be happy. Risk fre.....wait....lol.

    Sorry.

    --
    http://www.freebsd.org
  3. Damn. by DAldredge · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not only do US programmer have to compete against programmers in other countries, but now we have to compete againts the Undead?

    Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!

  4. I thought this was going to be helpfull by Zakabog · · Score: 5, Funny

    I saw the article title and I was very excited. I've bought many hard drives, and just recently I bought a 160 gig drive (was like $80 too after a mail in rebate, Fry's I love you...) and was about to buy a 250 ($110 after rebate, Fry's, still love you.) But then I figured, well if I do buy the 250, it's going to be able to hold around 200 gigs, and for some reason 50 gigs will be gone without a trace. I think there's 30 gigs missing on my 160 too, I've noticed this on a lot of drives (as drive sizes go up, so does the missing space.)

    I thought this would actually let you use up that lost space somehow, you did buy the drive, it should contain the space, but it doesn't. RAM is just the opposite, you buy 512, it has 560 or so, well any ram I bought did. Anyway, is their a way to recover this lost space? Is their something I'm doing wrong? It seems to be worse in linux (but I heard that's cause it reserves space for root to access.)

  5. I'm suprised by Zakabog · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm suprised with all the comments from people who DON'T want to try it out. This is SLASHDOT! Come on don't we all have dozens of 512MB hard drives? Or even some old 10 gig drive that you found in some computer while you were dumpster diving?

  6. Gigabytes Song by unknown_host · · Score: 5, Funny

    (A.K.A The Song of Failing Disks)

    Ten little gigabytes, waiting on line
    one caught a virus, then there were nine.

    Nine little gigabytes, holding just the date,
    someone jammed a write protect, then there were eight.

    Eight little gigabytes, should have been eleven,
    then they cut the budget, now there are seven.

    Seven little gigabytes, involved in mathematics
    stored an even larger prime, now there are six.

    Six little gigabytes, working like a hive,
    one died of overwork, now there are five.

    Five little gigabytes, trying to add more
    plugged in the wrong lead, now there are four.

    Four little gigabytes, failing frequently,
    one used for spare parts, now there are three.

    Three little gigabytes, have too much to do
    service man on holiday, now there are two.

    Two little gigabytes, badly overrun,
    took the work elsewhere, now just need one.

    One little gigabyte, systems far too small
    shut the whole thing down, now there's none at all.

  7. Re:Uh, no by DrSkwid · · Score: 5, Funny

    fdisk (on a Windows machine - I dunno the Linux equivalent).

    er, fdisk

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  8. I HAVE seen UFOs by Lord+Kano · · Score: 5, Funny

    And not even I believe this one.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  9. Re:Uh, no by antic · · Score: 5, Funny

    I initially misread your post as "enlarge their three inch hard dicks". From the crap that my mail server blocks, the spammers have been trying to enlarge their three inch hard dicks for a long time...

    --
    'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
  10. Re:Uh, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yeah, it works.. I just tried it and it seems to b##0"#,##0;\-""#,##0 ""#,##0.00;\-""#,##0.00# ,##0.00;]\-""#,##0.005 * ,##0.00;]\-""#,##0.005 * ,##0.00;]\-""#,##0.005 *

  11. In other news by sokk · · Score: 5, Funny

    In other news:
    Users report that 486to586.exe actually works.

    "It works, it really works", "My machine feels much faster" was some of the comments from the happy users.


    Karma whoring: But after some investigation, it was identified as a renamed copy of loadlin.exe :P

  12. Re:Uh, no by hayden · · Score: 5, Funny

    Could also be a misspelling of "Aural density". The measure of the amount of bullshit in any given sentence.

    --
    Nerd: Derogatory term typically directed at anybody with a lower Slashdot ID than you.
  13. Re:Uh, no by neiljt · · Score: 5, Funny

    CDROMs use constant data rate by varying the RPM of the drive depending on where you're located

    I can vouch for the fact that the RPM is greater in the heady latitudes of the UK. People living nearer to the equator will experience slightly longer seek times, and I wonder if those in places like Barrow AK & North Norway actually appreciate the extra performance.

    Maybe someone from New Zealand or nearby could chime in and verify that there data is read from the drive in the opposite direction.

  14. Re:Uh, no by MonkeyBoy · · Score: 5, Funny

    You forgot areole density. That's two per person, unless the carnival is in town.

    (Aw crud, maybe four per person. Dictionary.com wants to call part of the Iris an areole...)

    --

    Moof!

  15. Re:Uh, no by fireman+sam · · Score: 5, Funny

    Being from Australia, yes, we do read the information backwards. And it is stored in memory backwards. For example, lets say I have the number 0x2244 it is written on the disk as 0x4422. And, even more amazing is if we look at the number 0xffff, it can sometimes be read backwards, forwards, or randomly, giving the values:
    0xffff, 0xffff, and 0xffff. But, we get no errors.

    (Hear are some replys for you consideration:
    - Isn't Australia part of New Zealand?
    - Isn't New Zealand part of Australia?
    - That is the lamest piece of shit I have ever
    read.

    --
    it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.