We did this as we wanted to see how the utility performed with a wide variety of files.The album included 4 music files (2 in Mp3 and 2 in FLAC) format, 6 JPG image files of album covers (with thumbnails) and 4 PNG image files. The files we chose for recovery are an album of Mozart's Music available from the Internet Archive. The only third-party tools installed besides Tenorshare 4DDiG were VLC Media Player and GIMP. (Image credit: Future) Tenorshare 4DDiG: How we testedįor our data recovery tests we used a virtual machine with a clean install of Windows 11. If you install the utility on a working computer, you can also use it to create a bootable USB device to try and recover data from a crashed computer. This is a shame, as we've reviewed data recovery utilities in the past that will automatically detect damaged files and try to repair them and display a preview so they can be recovered. These files need to already be saved somewhere on a drive : it doesn't seem you can repair from within the app. There are also built-in features for repairing corrupted pictures or videos. This certainly would be appreciated by users who are trying to recover files on a work device. One advertised feature we thought might be useful, is the ability to pause scans, then resume them later. As always we recommend trying the free version to check your drive's detected before subscribing. However there's also a page stating that it's possible to recover data from ext4 partitions for Linux. The main website says that 4DDiG for Windows supports the NTFS, exFAT, and FAT16/FAT32 file systems. This places it in the big leagues as far as Data Recovery tools go. The utility can apparently recover over 1,000 different file types. Tenorshare's 4DDiG's product page makes some very bold claims. (Image credit: Future) Tenorshare 4DDiG: Features
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