HDD Regenerator 1.51
| Developer: |
Dmitriy Primochenko (more products...) |
| OS: | Win95/98/ME/NT 3.x/NT 4.x/2000/XP/2003/ Vista Starter/ Vista Home Basic/ Vista Home Premium/ Vista Business/ Vista Enterprise/ Vista Ultimate/ Vista Home Basic x64/ Vista Home Premium x64/ Vista Busin |
| License: | Shareware |
| Price: |
$59.95 (Buy it now)
|
| Size: | 0.71 MB |
| Rating: | Rate this program: |
|
|
|
HDD Regenerator is a unique program for regeneration of physically damaged hard disk drives. It does not hide bad sectors, it really restores them!
30-day money back guarantee
Unlimited license period
Free 1-year minor upgrades for all 1.xx versions
Large discounts on major upgrades
Program features
Ability to detect physical bad sectors on a hard disk drive surface.
Ability to repair physical bad sectors (magnetic errors) on a hard disk surface.
The product ignores file system, scans disk at physical level. It can be used with FAT, NTFS or any other file system, and also with unformatted or unpartitioned disks.
Bootable regenerating diskette allows starting regenerating process under DOS automatically.
Bootable regenerating CD can be created from the program and used to automatically start regenerating process.
Main benefits
Hard disk drive is an integral part of every computer. It stores all your information. One of the most prevalent defects of hard drives is bad sectors on the disk surface. Bad sectors are a part of the disk surface which contains not readable, but frequently necessary information. As a result of bad sectors you may have difficulties to read and copy data from your disk, your operating system becomes unstable and finally your computer may unable to boot altogether. When a hard drive is damaged with bad sectors, the disk not only becomes unfit for use, but also you risk losing information stored on it. The HDD Regenerator can repair damaged hard disks without affecting or changing existing data. As a result, previously unreadable and inaccessible information is restored.
How it works
Almost 60 % of damaged hard disks can be repaired by regeneration. You can always download free demo version and try to regenerate the first found bad sector. The main purpose of the unregistered demo version is to display a report which contains information about the possibility to regenerate the entire disk. |
|
|
Latest news:
CIOs vote on Vista for '09 (Tue, 02 Dec 2008 12:31:50 -0800)
Silicon.com's CIO jury ruled unanimously on the question of whether to implement Microsoft Windows Vista in 2009. The latest silicon.com CIO Jury has unanimously voted that they are not ready to invest in Microsoft's latest OS Vista. When asked if they had any plans to implement Vista,...
IT faces 'dire shortage' of core skills, study (Tue, 02 Dec 2008 05:13:54 -0800)
The skills needed to modernize core IT assets are in short supply, according to latest report from the application-management company The lack of core IT skills is a major impediment to modernizing key IT assets, according to a survey by application-management company Micro Focus. ...
Hackers boot Linux on iPhone (Mon, 01 Dec 2008 07:39:18 -0800)
A new front has opened in the ongoing arms race between Apple and iPhone hackers, with one hacker group making the iPhone boot with a Linux 2.6 kernel. A new front has opened in the ongoing arms race between Apple and iPhone hackers, with one hacker group making the...
Survey: CIOs 'out of the loop' (Mon, 01 Dec 2008 07:16:14 -0800)
CIOs are often seen as "glorified IT directors", looking after the day-to-day running of IT systems, instead of being used to align IT with business aims. Chief information officers are "out of the loop", according to a survey carried out by London-based Deloitte and the Cranfield School of Management....
Who gains from Microsoft's free Morro antivirus? (Mon, 01 Dec 2008 05:58:43 -0800)
Microsoft is dropping its subscription-based antivirus software in favor of a free package, code-named 'Morro'. ScanSafe Internet-security expert Mary Landesman investigates Microsoft's motives. Commentary--Microsoft is to replace its paid-for antivirus product with a free one, citing an altruistic desire to spread protection around the world. But many are less...
|
|
|