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flash drive
i was using my 512mb Kingston DataTraveller usb flash drive today at school with robot code on it. the period was running short so i waited until the code was compiled then i unplugged it. then i shut down the computer (well, more unplugged it). i went to my last class of the day, science. i came home and plugged in my flash drive, and it's recognized as a drive that isn't there. it shows up under a different name, and when i click on it, it says "please insert a drive". i'm so confused....it had our robot code as well as my programming summative (with the robot) on it!!! any advice?
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Re: flash drive
back up your data!
(sorry I don't have any helpful advice to get you out of this jam, but maybe you'll learn about backing up data and being extra careful with flash drives as a result?) |
Re: flash drive
Sorry, you cant do anything, always eject properly and save your data in various locations
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Re: flash drive
CNET article: Surprise! You killed your USB drive
Our team made the same mistake with our only copy of the code two years ago. We had to rewrite it from a very old version with less than a week to go before ship. |
Re: flash drive
You have my deepest sympathy. :(
I hadn't really thought about the idea that a flash drive could die. I would be devastated if the files on my flash drive were lost. I think I'll back it up tonight! |
Re: flash drive
I never use a flash drive as the only storage place for any files. I save files to the hard drive, and copy to the flash drive when needed.
Maybe I do that because I'm old enough to remember floppy disks :) |
Re: flash drive
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Re: flash drive
well, a cancellation prize might be other people learning from my mistake. HEAR THAT EVERYONE?!?!?!?
BACK UP YOUR DATA!!!!! NOW!!!!! |
Re: flash drive
I highly highly doubt that the drive itself is "dead". Especially if windows is still recognizing it. Instead, you probably interrupted a cached write to the drive or some such, and the file system is now corrupted. It might still be possible to save some of the data on the drive if you're determined and want to muck around with it. This has some info:
http://www.techspot.com/vb/topic45947.html and this might help: http://www.jufsoft.com/badcopy/flash_drive_recovery.asp You could also try downloading Knoppix or the Ultimate Boot CD and booting into Linux and seeing if you can read or format the drive from there. EDIT: Heck, if it's not supremely urgent or highly personal, you could mail it down here to Texas and I'd muck with it for ya. |
Re: flash drive
Try connecting it to a Windows Vista computer.
I had a drive I borrowed to a classmate to get a file off of, and they pulled it out without doing a Safely Remove. Surprise, it wouldn't mount in WinXP. I plugged it into my Vista laptop, and it automatically detected the error(s) and recovered all the data, except the file that was being accessed. (too bad, at least I got most of it back) |
Re: flash drive
Remember- Flash drives are not intended for the primary storage site. Only use your flash drive to transfer data between computers. Keep it all on your hard drive.
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Re: flash drive
i think it's pooched. i tried to re-format it (i can always re write the code on it) and it didn't wirk. i simply got an error that said "this volume cannot be formatted" (or something alont those lines.). i think i'm just going to have to buy a new one *sigh*
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Re: flash drive
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Re: flash drive
Even Good Old Hard and Floppy Drives fail. I just recently lost all my pics on my HDD. Boy was I upset. Luckily I backed up half of those pics 4 years ago too a CD. The best way too back up anything is to back it up in as many places as possible and have a program to update the backed up files if you add more too the folder.
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Re: flash drive
I pull my flash out "improperly" and have been using various flash drives on dozens of computers. I have NEVER had a problem. *Knocks on wood* I always make sure that my drive is not running while I pull it. The only time something goes wrong is when somebody pulls it during an application (that is running on the drive) like saving a document or something. That "Safely Remove Your Hardware" mumbo jumbo is exactly that, mumbo jumbo. If you use your brain and wait until the drive is stopped and than remove it you will be safe.
Peace. |
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