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Data Recovered From Space Shuttle Columbia HDD

WmHBlair writes "Data recovered from a 400MB Seagate hard drive carried on the Space Shuttle Columbia has been used to complete a physics experiment performed on the mission in space. The Johnson Space Center sent the recovered drive to Kroll Ontrack in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Considering the shape the drive was in (see picture in the linked article), it could indeed qualify for the 'most amazing disk data recovery ever.'" Update: 05/08 12:51 GMT by T : Reader lucas123 points out a piece at Computerworld with a series of photos of the recovered drive.

6 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. Yup... by Raineer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Data recovery has come a long way, keep this in mind when not using proper deletion techniques! Would have been nice to see a picture of the HDD though, to get a full understanding of the recovery.

    1. Re:Yup... by avandesande · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the burden of proof lays on the outrageous claim, not the reasonable assertion.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
  2. Re:Mounting Brackets by eln · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think when you're intending to launch something into space using a couple of giant rockets, you might be concerned about vibration shaking normal bolts loose.

    As for the condition of the drive, it's hard to say. The exterior was obviously fried, but it was still basically drive-shaped, and from the picture it's impossible to say how damaged the platters were. If the outside was messed up but the platters were still intact, I would think recovery would be fairly simple. Would have been nice to include a picture of the interior of the drive, or maybe even multiple pictures as they took it apart.

  3. Re:I've had some drives crash on me, but.. by theodicey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, they probably did it for next to nothing, anticipating all the free press coverage they would get. This very "press hit" on slashdot is a good example of what they were aiming at. (Although in this specific case, they deserve the good press they're getting.)

  4. Re:I've had some drives crash on me, but.. by bkr1_2k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Actually, they probably did it for next to nothing, anticipating all the free press coverage they would get. "

    Don't count on it. First off, they probably didn't even know if they could recover the data. Second, they would have no way of knowing for sure that NASA would release the information about them providing the data recovery services. Third, they very likely wouldn't have known whether or not the data (if recovered) would be used for anything in the future. Fourth, there are very strict rules about government agencies doing business where they don't pay for services, especially with potentially classified data on the drives.

    I would bet very strongly that they got well paid for this recovery.

    --
    "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
  5. What about the temperature of re-entry? by Weaselmancer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd say that's the part that makes this impressive. Re-entry is known to be pretty darn warm. And heat will scatter magnetic domains. Heat up a magnet - it's not a magnet anymore.

    Either this HD was in the center of a ball of stuff and didn't get very hot, or Seagate has some seriously awesome engineering going on.

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    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.