Once the program has eventually finished, you're able to browse an Explorer-like tree of files and folders to try and locate your missing data. ![]() (Although you can tweak things by changing how the program handles bad sectors, and allocating more data to its read cache, for instance - check the full-sized screen grab to see how that works.) ![]() Which may take a while, because the program is exceptionally thorough, and inevitably that means it can also be slow. If you choose the full data recovery mode, then it's just a matter of selecting the drive with the missing files, and leaving ZAR to do its work. It supports NTFS compression, and ZAR can even try to reconstruct broken RAID 0, RAID1+0 and RAID 5 arrays, so there's a great deal of power here. Whatever mode you're using, the program supports a wide range of file systems: FAT16, FAT32, NTFS 1.2/ 3.0/ 3.1, ext2/3/4 and XFS. ![]() While most of the competition place major restrictions on their trial builds, ZAR can recover up to 4 folders, and also includes a basic image recovery tool which works forever, no registration required. Zero Assumption Recovery (ZAR) is the trial version of a commercial undelete tool - but don't let that put you off.
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