Slashdot Mirror


USB Drives — Recovery?

pipingguy writes "Now that 'thumb drives' are so inexpensive (a 1-GB SD card with USB housing/adapter costs about $25), which programs does Slashdot recommend for system recovery? What is the need-to-have software? Additionally, I'd like to get some input on the durability of the newish card reader / adapter devices, as some of them seem to be pretty flimsy (but very useful/flexible as opposed to the old fixed-capacity NAND devices)."

12 of 147 comments (clear)

  1. WinPE by Utopia · · Score: 4, Informative
  2. Thumb Drive by black6host · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As far as thumb drives go I'd recommend the Titanium Cruzer which comes into up to 2 gig models. I keep mine on my keychan which is outiside on my harley 365 days a year. Rain or shine, and here in Florida we get a lot of rain. I've pretty much abused it much more than I expected to and it's never failed me once. I'll leave others to comment on what to put on it but if you're loadking up a pice of crap that's what your going to have just when you need it at your clients office. Quality tools pay for themselves.

    Regards,
    Fleet

  3. the same ones you used before... by skiingyac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...when you copied to CD/DVD/FTP/SMB/whatever.

    why is this on the front page?

  4. System recovery? by trmj · · Score: 5, Informative

    To start with, there are even less expensive methods than the one you mention, the first of which that comes to mind being the $10 1gig usb flash drives at microcenter.

    On to the bit about recovery. You say system recovery, but use those words to link to a usb flash drive. Did you mean recovering data from said flash drive? If so, the data on those works the same way it does on a hard drive. The system deletes a file from the tree, but leaves the data intact until written over. Any standard undelete program will recover files you've simply deleted.

    As for backing up your system to a flash drive, I wouldn't recommend it unless you're running a small enough footprint to fit on one. The 8gig flash drive are getting to be reasonably priced, but that's still not enough for most full system backups.

    --
    Work sucked, until it became unemployment, when it became slightly more tolerable. -Tet
  5. photorec by porksoda · · Score: 5, Informative

    PhotoRec is data recovery software specifically designed for recovering lost photo files on corrupted memory sticks (CompactFlash, Memory Stick, SecureDigital, SmartMedia, Microdrive, MMC, USB Memory Drives...)

    DOS, Win, Linux, Mac versions available here.

  6. Bootable Flash Drive with Debian installed. by lky · · Score: 4, Informative

    The first thing I would do is build a self-contained Debian install, then you can add any tools from the Debian repositories with a simple apt-get.

    For examples of how to install and configure everything check out the Howtos and Automated Installer at Feraga.com.

  7. ubcd by Meltir · · Score: 5, Informative

    Its not exactly designed for thumb drives, but its saved my hide numerous times:
    http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/

    Im pretty sure that if you can boot of a thumb drive, it wouldnt take too much to make this work.

    I have a copy of the latest version with me at all times, in my wallet, on a mini-cdr.

    All freeware tools, including a full fledged linux (Insert linux i think its called),
    dozens of msdos utils, net stuff, iirc there were bios flashers in there too at some point.

  8. Be a good Windows user... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...and defragment your USB key periodically!

  9. Distrowatch by Almahtar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Distrowatch is a great place to find forensics/recovery distrobutions. When I have to recover a system (be it Windows, Mac, or Linux) I've found that pretty much any Linux liveCD or USB forensics distro will do the trick. From editing/fixing partitions to recovering data from a dead OS to fixing a botched install of an OS the tools are all there.

    1. Re:Distrowatch by Almahtar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Oh and on a side note they're great for anonymous use of computers that normally require you to authenticate, provided you have physical access to them. Most network admins don't think of the possibility of bootable USB volumes and thus don't disable it in BIOS. On top of that, most BIOS manufacturers don't think people need an option for disabling booting from a USB disk and don't provide it. Don't have a valid account in this lab but need to check your e-mail? Plug in your USB disk, power down the computer, boot into your USB Linux install, check your mail, and reboot back to normal operation.

  10. Re:an emergency kit should contain by Shawn+is+an+Asshole · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is an Ultimate BootCD for Windows which is based off of BartPE. I use it regularly and highly recommend it. It includes a good amount of tools and more can be added.

    I'd also recommend INSERT. It's a Linux LiveCD that includes ntfs-3g (full read/write support), gParted, the Linux-NTFS tools (ntfsclone and ntfsresize being the most useful to me), and others. It has a GUI (fluxbox is the manager).

    Recovery is Possible is also excellent and I use the PXE version heavily. My only complaint about it is that it doesn't have ntfs-3g yet. When I need that, or need to resize partitions (gParted) I use INSERT.

    --
    "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks