Howie

Distinguished
Apr 4, 2004
35
0
18,530
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain (More info?)

Hi There,I wonder if you can help me?
I took a load of pictures of my nipper's school sports day on my digital
camera and decided to burn them direct from the camera to a CD so she could
subsequently show them to her friends on this and her friends computers. I
duly plugged in the camera (which showed up as an external drive) and
dragged and dropped the files to the CD drive icon using windows explorerer
(I use Windows XP - Home Edition). The files were duly transfered to the CD
in 'shadow format' and i clicked on the "write these files to CD" icon. All
went well and as usual, i noticed that at the end of the burning process when
prompted to press the 'finish' button on the Wizard all the shadow files
automatically disappeared! (A friend has told me that they are automatically
deleted by the Wizard and do not go via the Recycle Bin - Is that correct?)
Well the CD was a peach and i therefore deleted all the files from the
camera. NEXT?.... Yes you guessed it, about a month later she lost the CD on
the way to school!! So i have tried to find the files that were created on
the computer during the burning process because the original camera files
have gone (i use it extensively and on a daily basis for work) and I have
discovered that they were temorarily stored in a hidden file called "CD
burning". This folder is however empty. During the interim period I have
burned 3 or 4 further CDs with loads of data for my wife's MSc studies using
the same technique and the computer has been re-booted every day since the
original sports day copying. Someone told me that once the files were
automatically deleted at the end of the burning process that the area they
had occupied was subsequently made available for new files and that because
of the volume of work then undertaken the likelyhood is that they have all
been overwritten and are therefore gone forever!!... What do you think?
Additionally as part of my routine system Maintainance i have de-fragged,
Optimized and deleted temporary files at least 3 times since the initial copy.
My question is this?.... Do i have a hope in hell of
retrieving/rescueing/restoring these pictures? I would be prepared to pay for
a specialist company to do some sort of professional retrieval if its
possible as my daughter is now very sad. Or do i wait till next years sports
Day and save a copy just in case......
Thank you for your time
regards Howard
 
G

Guest

Guest
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain (More info?)

Open my pictures folder,search,select pictures,type in any name for one,then
in results,select,"search for all files of this type".Or type in JPEG or a
type of
photo/file.

"Howie" wrote:

> Hi There,I wonder if you can help me?
> I took a load of pictures of my nipper's school sports day on my digital
> camera and decided to burn them direct from the camera to a CD so she could
> subsequently show them to her friends on this and her friends computers. I
> duly plugged in the camera (which showed up as an external drive) and
> dragged and dropped the files to the CD drive icon using windows explorerer
> (I use Windows XP - Home Edition). The files were duly transfered to the CD
> in 'shadow format' and i clicked on the "write these files to CD" icon. All
> went well and as usual, i noticed that at the end of the burning process when
> prompted to press the 'finish' button on the Wizard all the shadow files
> automatically disappeared! (A friend has told me that they are automatically
> deleted by the Wizard and do not go via the Recycle Bin - Is that correct?)
> Well the CD was a peach and i therefore deleted all the files from the
> camera. NEXT?.... Yes you guessed it, about a month later she lost the CD on
> the way to school!! So i have tried to find the files that were created on
> the computer during the burning process because the original camera files
> have gone (i use it extensively and on a daily basis for work) and I have
> discovered that they were temorarily stored in a hidden file called "CD
> burning". This folder is however empty. During the interim period I have
> burned 3 or 4 further CDs with loads of data for my wife's MSc studies using
> the same technique and the computer has been re-booted every day since the
> original sports day copying. Someone told me that once the files were
> automatically deleted at the end of the burning process that the area they
> had occupied was subsequently made available for new files and that because
> of the volume of work then undertaken the likelyhood is that they have all
> been overwritten and are therefore gone forever!!... What do you think?
> Additionally as part of my routine system Maintainance i have de-fragged,
> Optimized and deleted temporary files at least 3 times since the initial copy.
> My question is this?.... Do i have a hope in hell of
> retrieving/rescueing/restoring these pictures? I would be prepared to pay for
> a specialist company to do some sort of professional retrieval if its
> possible as my daughter is now very sad. Or do i wait till next years sports
> Day and save a copy just in case......
> Thank you for your time
> regards Howard
>
 
G

Guest

Guest
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain (More info?)

Howie

The chances of retrieval are not good at all.. you have learned an important
lesson here.. important files and data should be saved somewhere safe, and
that place is not in the school bag of a child..


--
Mike Hall
MVP - Windows Shell/user

http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm





"Howie" <Howie@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:D558528C-ECAC-4841-9CC2-4B37979BB953@microsoft.com...
> Hi There,I wonder if you can help me?
> I took a load of pictures of my nipper's school sports day on my digital
> camera and decided to burn them direct from the camera to a CD so she
> could
> subsequently show them to her friends on this and her friends computers. I
> duly plugged in the camera (which showed up as an external drive) and
> dragged and dropped the files to the CD drive icon using windows
> explorerer
> (I use Windows XP - Home Edition). The files were duly transfered to the
> CD
> in 'shadow format' and i clicked on the "write these files to CD" icon.
> All
> went well and as usual, i noticed that at the end of the burning process
> when
> prompted to press the 'finish' button on the Wizard all the shadow files
> automatically disappeared! (A friend has told me that they are
> automatically
> deleted by the Wizard and do not go via the Recycle Bin - Is that
> correct?)
> Well the CD was a peach and i therefore deleted all the files from the
> camera. NEXT?.... Yes you guessed it, about a month later she lost the CD
> on
> the way to school!! So i have tried to find the files that were created on
> the computer during the burning process because the original camera files
> have gone (i use it extensively and on a daily basis for work) and I have
> discovered that they were temorarily stored in a hidden file called "CD
> burning". This folder is however empty. During the interim period I have
> burned 3 or 4 further CDs with loads of data for my wife's MSc studies
> using
> the same technique and the computer has been re-booted every day since the
> original sports day copying. Someone told me that once the files were
> automatically deleted at the end of the burning process that the area they
> had occupied was subsequently made available for new files and that
> because
> of the volume of work then undertaken the likelyhood is that they have all
> been overwritten and are therefore gone forever!!... What do you think?
> Additionally as part of my routine system Maintainance i have de-fragged,
> Optimized and deleted temporary files at least 3 times since the initial
> copy.
> My question is this?.... Do i have a hope in hell of
> retrieving/rescueing/restoring these pictures? I would be prepared to pay
> for
> a specialist company to do some sort of professional retrieval if its
> possible as my daughter is now very sad. Or do i wait till next years
> sports
> Day and save a copy just in case......
> Thank you for your time
> regards Howard
>