![]() You can access AnyRecover support from within the utility, which will take you to the FAQ, which answers most common queries. Unlike other utilities we've seen there's a loading bar but as we said although you might have to wait a little longer, AnyRecover responds very quickly to commands. Official AnyRecover Documentation states that at least 512MB of RAM is required to run the utility, though we found that it used less than half this when scanning drives. In total 24 of the original 25 files were recovered successfully, with only the torrent file missing. The filenames were also recovered intact. The utility found 58 files in total, including all 17 image files, all 4 audio files, both XML files and the. ![]() It didn't appear immediately in the "Device and Drives" panel but when we selected "Can't find location" AnyRecover found the lost disk almost immediately We ran another "Deep Scan." Our final test was on the virtual drive which had a damaged volume header. In total 16 of the 25 original files were successfully recovered. All the filenames were missing but the files themselves opened without issue. All 13 JPG files could be previewed as did the 2 MP3 files. AnyRecover ran a 'Deep Scan' and we say 3 of the 4 PNG files listed but only one of these could be opened. We had less joy with the drive which had been formatted after the files were deleted. The remaining files were either duplicates or system files. The only missing data were the torrent and. In total 23 of the 25 files were recovered successfully including filenames. Both XML files were also present and correct. We found all 13 JPG and all 4 PNG files intact with filenames in the 'Photo' category. Still, the filenames were intact and they played without issue. Strangely the two FLAC audio files were also there but listed under the 'Other' rather than the 'Audio' category. We checked the 'Audio' category first and found both MP3s with filenames, though AnyRecover had to download an extra software package to preview them. ![]() Still, if you're considering buying software we encourage you to read all reviews thoroughly and make sure that the developer offers a refund policy.ĪnyRecover worked magically in our first test on the drive where the files had simply been deleted from the Recycle Bin. We do not believe that running data recovery tools in a virtual environment has a significant effect on how they function. The tests were performed one after the other on three separate virtual drives: We copied the files in the music album to a 512MB virtual NTFS-formatted hard drive, which was then attached to the Windows 11 virtual machine. The files also included 2 XML files, a torrent file and an 'SQLite' file containing details of the album. 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 AnyRecover were VLC Media Player and GIMP. (Image credit: AnyRecover) AnyRecover: How we testedįor our data recovery tests we used a virtual machine with a clean install of Windows 11.
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