Posted 22 October 2007 - 04:34 PM
Well, I would like to formally welcome to you PCWorld's, "I should have backed up my personal data" club LOL :D
Okay, here is the long and short of it. Short answer, yes, when data is deleted from the hard drive, it is not really "deleted" until another file overwrites it in the sector of the hard drive in which the deleted file resides. However, I am not sure if that applies to individual emails. I know the Personal Data File (not .pdf) is a collection of all of your Outlook, or Outlook Express settings, including all emails.
Now, there are applications, and companies, that claim to be able to recover any deleted files. This is where you must be very careful. Smax013 recommends one particular application, for the life of me I cannot think of the name of it, that will allow you to test whether or not a Data Recovery process would be successful. However, to actually run the recovery process, you would have to buy the full version. I believe it is $99.
There are many other applications that operate along the same lines. However, please understand that there is absolutely no guarantee of recovery and the more activity your computer does, the less likely any recovery process would work.
Also, there are companies that claim to be able to recover data from any drive. Now, the majority of these companies will charge you upwards of $300-$500 dollars. Again, there is no guarantee of recovery. Most of these companies will refund at least a portion of your money if the recovery process is not successful.
Personally, I refuse to recommend either an application or a company simply because there is no substitute for a proactive approach. Once the data is lost, the lesson to potentially recover the data is costly and valuable.
What is the lesson? Backup, Backup, Backup. As you are well aware, emails are just as important as data. Once an email is lost, unless you are under an exchange server, the chances of recovery are slim at best. Now, going forward, I would strongly recommend you set up your email account to keep a copy of the original email.You can actually do that within Outlook Express:
- Open Outlook Express
- Click on Tools -> Accounts...
- Click on the "Mail" tab
- Select your mail account and click Properties
- Click on the "Advanced" tab
- Under Delivery, put a check next to "Leave a copy of messages on server"
- I would recommend not checking either "Remove from server..." option
- Click Apply -> OK
Also, you should be able to back up the Personal Data File as if it were any other file. Since I do not use Outlook Express, I am not exactly sure of the steps; however, you should be able to export the data file directly from within Outlook Express.
As I was looking around, I found something that you may be able to use. You can search for an Outlook Express Mail Message:
- Open the Windows Search feature (Right Click on the C: drive and click "Search")
- Click on the "More Advanced Options" double arrow
- Click on the down arrow under "Type of file"
- Once the field populates, look for "Outlook Express Mail Message"
- Put check marks next to:
1) Search System Folders
2) Search Hidden Files and Folders
3) Search Subfolders
- Click Search
This may find every single Mail Message, including the ones that were accidentally deleted.