Recovery Toolbox for RAR 1.1.7
| Developer: |
Recovery Toolbox, Inc. (more products...) |
| OS: | Win98/ME/NT 4.x/XP/2000/2003/ Tablet PC Edition 2005/ Media Center Edition 2005/ Vista Starter/ Vista Home Basic/ Vista Home Premium/ Vista Business/ Vista Enterprise/ Vista Ultimate/ Vista Home Basic |
| License: | Shareware |
| Price: |
$27 (Buy it now)
|
| Size: | 1.56 MB |
| Rating: | Rate this program: |
|
|
|
Recovery Toolbox for RAR was created to help users solve the rar recovery issues and always have control of their archived data. It recovers information from damaged rar files and minimizes data loss during the rar recovery process. One of the peculiarities of this application is the fact that it employs several heuristic algorithms and methods to repair rar file or recover information from damaged rar files. The use of multiple algorithms allows the program to minimize data loss during rar recovery, therefore the user sees as much as possible about the files being recovered. The last phase of the process is the data integrity check, which ensures that the recovered files are fully usable. Password-protected archives are no problem for Recovery Toolbox for RAR – you will have to enter the password when prompted and the application will make a fix rar file attempt using the specified password. The program supports Windows 98, Windows Me, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000.
Recovery Toolbox for RAR is able to:
- Repair encrypted data from RAR archives
- Repair self-extracting (SFX) files
- Repair RAR files larger than 2 GB
- Restore RAR files from damaged media (floppy disks, CDs, DVDs, RAR drives, etc.)
- Check file integrity
- Repair corrupted RAR archives on the local area network
- Fix the Cannot open file: it does not appear to be a valid archive in RAR archive error
One of the fundamental concepts embodied in Recovery Toolbox for RAR is the simplicity of use. Its wizard-driven, intuitive interface makes the process of corrupt rar repair a task literally anyone can perform.
While being a convenient, efficient and habitual method of storing and archiving information, RAR files can sometimes be a real pain in the neck and a problem that can jeopardize the completion of urgent tasks. A significant fraction of files downloaded from the Internet are compressed into RAR archives for traffic-saving purposes, which is an obviously positive fact. |
|
|
Latest news:
Information Agenda: A strategy shift from applications to information (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 11:28:14 -0800)
Stuck between business challenges on the one hand, and information management systems on the other hand which simply limit your ability to respond. IBM's Tom Inman wants an easy way to spread your information across the board. Commentary--As the CIO of a flourishing business, you are happy to report...
Python update makes break with past (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 08:40:34 -0800)
Python 3.0 is a major change from the Python 2 series, and the first release that is intentionally backwards-incompatible. Python developers on Wednesday released the final version of Python 3.0, a major reworking of the programming language that is incompatible with the Python 2 series. Python...
The weirdest computing disasters of 2008 (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 05:12:55 -0800)
Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. The top 10...
Roadmap: Open source to take over mainstream IT (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 12:46:14 -0800)
Open source-based IT jobs will grow and the cloud will be ubiquitous, as long as the community takes certain steps, according to a roadmap from the Open World Forum. Within the next 12 years, 40 percent of IT jobs will be related to open source, and open-source-based cloud computing...
Oracle adds data-integrity code to Linux kernel (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 08:00:52 -0800)
The enterprise-software company has collaborated with networking-hardware company Emulex to produce Linux kernel data-integrity code. Oracle has announced that it has contributed data-integrity code to the Linux kernel. The open-source code, which has been accepted into the Linux 2.6.27 kernel, is designed to reduce data corruption...
|
|
|