How To Undelete Deleted Files

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How To Undelete Deleted Files

If you've just accidentally deleted a file from your computer and it's not shown in the Recycle Bin then you need to stop everything until you've got your file back.

When you delete a file in Windows with the delete key or by selected Delete from a drop down menu, it's not really deleted. What Windows does instead is to mark the disk space as "OK to use again when I need to".

Most of the time this is usual, especially if you're kind of trigger happy with the delete key.

Of course, if you truly mean to delete a file forever, you need to use specialist software like Secure Delete.

But for those times when you didn't mean to press the delete key, you need to go through a fairly easy process.

1. Don't save anything else. Especially if you're tight for disk space. Because Windows re-uses space on your hard drive, if you save a new file there's a chance that Windows will over-write some or all of the file you want to undelete.

2. Look in your recycle bin. Depending on how you deleted the file, it may be in there. If that's the case, right click the file with your mouse and select the Restore option. If that's the case, congratulations, you've undeleted the file!

3. Get some specialist file recovery software to come to your rescue. The best undelete software is guaranteed to recover your deleted files or you get a full refund. I recommend that you download the software onto a different computer (or save it onto a different drive if you have more than one drive in your PC and know which drive the accidentally deleted file was on). Then burn it onto a CD and run it from there.

The best undelete file software I've come across is available for instant download from this link.

Search And Recover Deleted Files 

Digital Camera Undelete Program 

Deleting files on your digital camera is easy. Sometimes it's too easy and you accidentally select the delete option rather than something else.

As with files you've wrongly deleted from your hard disk, don't take or save any more photos until you've run a recovery routine. This is especially important with digital cameras as the memory space is nowhere near as big as the hard drive on your computer.

To do this properly, you're going to need software that is specially designed for the task.

The good news is that you're not the first person in the world to have accidentally erased a photo when you didn't mean to.

This means that software designers have had plenty of time to write and tweak their programs so that there's a near enough 100% success rate in recovering photos from digital cameras.

So, your first step is to get hold of a good software program like this one. Take a look at the software and check it meets your needs, but don't buy it through that page!

I recommend this software because it not only works with photos you've accidentally deleted but it also works if your memory card has become corrupted or even if it has been formatted.

Thing is, that company offer a hidden discount on their software. Not lots of bucks, but a useful $4 savings. Just use one of the discounted purchase links below:

Discounted credit card digital photo undelete software.

Discounted Paypal digital photo undelete software.

Of course, all this software means that if you ever sell or give away your camera, other people could undelete your photos. Most of the time, you probably won't care that they have possible access to your holiday snaps (although with today's photo imaging software, who knows what they could do to your snaps!). But if there are any photos on your card that you'd prefer not to share with others, then there's a software program to securely delete photos from your camera. This will get rid of all your photos securely and is much safer than just formatting your photo memory card.

What Do You Need To Undelete? 

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Windows Vista Undelete 

Windows Vista For Dummies

Amazon Price: $14.29 (as of 12/16/2009)Buy Now

This book gets you through all the Windows Vista tasks and tripwires, including starting programs, finding files, navigating the new see-through interface, staying safe while you cruise the Internet, and much more including several ways to undelete files.

How You Can Undelete Internet Explorer History 

Most of the time, most of us just leave our internet history stored in Internet Explorer or Firefox.

Sometimes, though, there are times when you want to delete your browsing history. Maybe you share your computer with your children and you've visited a couple sites that you wouldn't want them to be tempted to visit. So you've deleted your browsing history. Either by using all the various menu options or, if you do this often, maybe by using some specialist software to make your life easier.

Either way, your browsing history has been deleted.

Which isn't normally a problem.

Until you need to find something you were searching for a couple of days ago and you can't find the site again. Maybe Google have changed the order they display their results in. Or maybe you can't remember the exact words you typed to get to the site.

Needless to say, you didn't bookmark the site in your Favorites.

Normally you'd just press Control-H to bring up your browsing history. But if you've cleared out your files, that won't help.

The easiest way is to use Windows built-in System Restore to go back to a point before your deletion. How to do this varies between XP and Vista, so just search for System Restore in Windows Help and follow the instructions there.

More About File Undeletion 

Undeletion is a feature for restoring computer files which have been removed from a file system by file deletion. Deleted data can be recovered on many file systems, but not all file systems provide an undeletion feature. Recovering data without an undeletion facility is usually called data recovery, rather than undeletion. Although undeletion can help prevent users from accidentally losing data, it can also pose a computer security risk, since users may not be aware that deleted files remain accessible.

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