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Software and utilities for data recovery from virtually any storage media. Simple and intuitive tools allow for recovery of damaged, inaccessible, or deleted files, documents, videos, and images from hard drives, solid-state drives, and memory cards.

Sysadmins and forensic specialists benefit from getting access to damaged or working virtual machines, corrupted or malfunction RAID 0-6 arrays, and other complex software and hardware configurations.

Among other tools:

  • Linux Recovery: Free recovery of Linux files and partitions from Windows
  • Partition Recovery: An expert tool for recovering lost partitions
  • Linux Reader: File and folder access on Ext, UFS, HFS, ReiserFS, or APFS file systems from Windows
  • Uneraser: Restore any deleted or corrupted file from NTFS, FAT32/exFAT/FAT, APFS, etc.

Source: https://www.diskinternals.com/download/.

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Source: derived from https://www.tomshardware.com/software/linux/best-linux-distros-for-reviving-an-old-pc.

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There’s a command-line utility called shred, which overwrites data in a file or a whole device with random bits, making it nearly impossible to recover.

First of all, you need to identify the name of the device.

This might be something like /dev/sdb or /dev/hdb (but not like /dev/sdb1, that’s a partition). You can use sudo fdisk -l to list all connected storage devices, and find your external hard drive there.

N.B. Make sure it is the correct device, picking the wrong device will wipe it.

Unmount all currently mounted partitions on that device, if any. Then run the following, replacing /dev/sdX with the name of your device:

sudo shred -v /dev/sdX

This will overwrite all the blocks on the device with random data three times, the -v flag is for verbose and will print the current progress.

You can add the option -nN to only do this N times, to save time on large capacity devices. This might take a while, depending on the size of your external hard drive (I think it takes twenty minutes or so for my 4 GB flash drive).

You can also set all bits to zero after the last iteration by adding the option -z, I prefer to do this.

sudo shred -v -n1 -z /dev/sdX

After this, you would have to repartition the device. The easiest way is to install GParted and use it:

sudo apt-get install gparted
gksu gparted

Choose your device in the upper-right corner list. Then select Device -> Create partition table to create a partition table on the device.

Then add a single partition that uses all of the unallocated space on the device, choosing fat32 as the file system. Apply the changes by click the Apply button (the green checkmark) in the toolbar.

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[German] Large collection of Outlook Tools and Add-ins, for mails, calendar, contacts, security/virus scanning, and more: outlook-stuff.com/tools.html.

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Zapier is an online automation tool that connects your favorite apps, such as Gmail, Slack, Mailchimp, and more. You can connect two or more apps to automate repetitive tasks without coding or relying on developers to build the integration. It’s easy enough that anyone can build their own app workflows with just a few clicks.

For example, maybe you get a lot of email attachments in your Gmail account and you want to save them to Dropbox. Every time you get an attachment, you could open up the email, click the attachment, and then save it to Dropbox. Or you can have Zapier automate this for you, saving you time and effort: zapier.com.

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Disclaimer: Do not circumvent DRM. Always assure compliance.

  1. Downlaod “Kindle App” on PC.
  2. Locate *.azw-file of relevant manuscript under C:\Users\<…>\Documents\My Kindle Content\<…>_EBOK.
  3. Import into Calibre (make sure to have the right plug-ins installed – esp. DeDRM & KFX-Conversion).
  4. Convert manuscript in Calibre to PDF or whatever format.
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In case, during your partition resizing, your Windows installation turns sour (e.g., when installing multi boot such as with Bootcamp on a Mac), the follwing tutorial might serve the purpose: https://www.digitalcitizen.life/command-prompt-fix-issues-your-boot-records.

Especially the Bootrec.exe does a good job in the case of a “Missing operating system”.

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