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Data Display Debugger 3.3.11
Data Display Debugger is a common graphical user interface for GDB, DBX and XDB. more>>
GNU DDD is a graphical front-end for command-line debuggers such as GDB, DBX, WDB, Ladebug, JDB, XDB, the Perl debugger, the bash debugger, or the Python debugger.
Besides "usual front-end features such as viewing source texts, DDD has become famous through its interactive graphical data display, where data structures are displayed as graphs.
<<lessBesides "usual front-end features such as viewing source texts, DDD has become famous through its interactive graphical data display, where data structures are displayed as graphs.
Download (7.3MB)
Added: 2005-04-18 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1661 downloads
PlainDoc 1.55
PlainDoc document production system allows you to write documents as normal text files. more>>
PlainDoc (pd2tex) document production system allows you to write documents as normal text files. pd2tex tool converts the plain text files to:
- TeX which then gets converted to pdf (you need pdflatex tool installed)
- DocBook (dbx) which can be fed to various tool chains (not supplied) to generate pdf and html
- flat HTML (entire document in one HTML file)
- multipage HTML (each section as its own HTML file)
PlainDoc system was developed by Sampo Kellomaki from around 2002 onwards with the aim of solving document editing problems for writing:
- IT specifications documents
- software product manuals and documentation
- scientific and research papers
- legal documents
- presentation slides
Some of the goals were:
- document source is the plain text representation, no separate conversion needed
- documents are intuitive to write and understand
- getting a neophyte to a reasonable level of productivity and achievement should be easy. A college freshman should be able to use PlainDoc after 1 hour training, provided that all the tool chains have already been installed
- it must be very difficult to fatally corrupt a document; fixing corruption should be as simple as editing the file
- it must be possible to do diffs between versions of the document
- using cvs should be well supported (helps to avoid fatal loss of document, too)
- enable use of plain text productivity environments like emacs(1)
- the PlainDoc system MUST be serious enough to produce most any type of document and thus end the need to use any other system
- typeset quality output in paper and web formats
PlainDoc has now (Oct, 2004) been around for more than two years and it has been successfully used to produce:
- major IT specifications conforming to formatting rules (70 page range)
- research papers and theses conforming to formatting rules (200 page range)
- product manuals (500 page range)
- legal documents and contracts conforming to formatting rules
PlainDoc acknowledges its LaTeX legacy and does not aim at WYSIWYG (except in plain text document production, of course :-) however we are not totally against visual formatting either. Thus many hooks for accessing the underlying document formatters capabilities have been made available, such as:
- direct entry of TeX code
- direct entry of DocBook code
- direct entry of HTML code
These should allow you to get your job done without the system philosophy standing too much in the way, while for most part leveraging the automatic formatting of standard constructs.
<<less- TeX which then gets converted to pdf (you need pdflatex tool installed)
- DocBook (dbx) which can be fed to various tool chains (not supplied) to generate pdf and html
- flat HTML (entire document in one HTML file)
- multipage HTML (each section as its own HTML file)
PlainDoc system was developed by Sampo Kellomaki from around 2002 onwards with the aim of solving document editing problems for writing:
- IT specifications documents
- software product manuals and documentation
- scientific and research papers
- legal documents
- presentation slides
Some of the goals were:
- document source is the plain text representation, no separate conversion needed
- documents are intuitive to write and understand
- getting a neophyte to a reasonable level of productivity and achievement should be easy. A college freshman should be able to use PlainDoc after 1 hour training, provided that all the tool chains have already been installed
- it must be very difficult to fatally corrupt a document; fixing corruption should be as simple as editing the file
- it must be possible to do diffs between versions of the document
- using cvs should be well supported (helps to avoid fatal loss of document, too)
- enable use of plain text productivity environments like emacs(1)
- the PlainDoc system MUST be serious enough to produce most any type of document and thus end the need to use any other system
- typeset quality output in paper and web formats
PlainDoc has now (Oct, 2004) been around for more than two years and it has been successfully used to produce:
- major IT specifications conforming to formatting rules (70 page range)
- research papers and theses conforming to formatting rules (200 page range)
- product manuals (500 page range)
- legal documents and contracts conforming to formatting rules
PlainDoc acknowledges its LaTeX legacy and does not aim at WYSIWYG (except in plain text document production, of course :-) however we are not totally against visual formatting either. Thus many hooks for accessing the underlying document formatters capabilities have been made available, such as:
- direct entry of TeX code
- direct entry of DocBook code
- direct entry of HTML code
These should allow you to get your job done without the system philosophy standing too much in the way, while for most part leveraging the automatic formatting of standard constructs.
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2006-04-13 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1290 downloads
mroovca stats 0.5.3
mroovca stats is a Web site statistics generator with various functions and tables. more>>
mroovca stats is a Web site statistics generator with various functions and tables. mroovca stats is simple, configurable, and provides an administrative interface.
It can measure statistics concerning the client browser, geolocalization, connection type, and referers. It can also recognize Polish towns.
In 2001 ive started to write my own version of web-site(s) statisics, since that time i had to change my name, changed from flat-file to datadase and finally rewrite whole code to be more flexible.
To work with databases it uses "dbx" functions module from PHP. At this moment its tested only with MySQL and prepared to work with this db engine. But in close future i will provide installer, updater and support for other database engines.
But its not end. im working for more enchancements and statistics including tables, charts, maps, etc.
Just download, extract from archive, configure and use it!!
Main features:
- easy instller/updater (for versions >=0.4.4)
- language support - english and polish at this time
- prepared for work with more than one websites/accounts
- root panel for adding and removing accounts
- admin panel for accounts
- all accounts have their own password
- access for viewing stats for all or on passowrd
- showing stats with or without reloads
- timezone correction
- excluded hosts or (sub)domains
<<lessIt can measure statistics concerning the client browser, geolocalization, connection type, and referers. It can also recognize Polish towns.
In 2001 ive started to write my own version of web-site(s) statisics, since that time i had to change my name, changed from flat-file to datadase and finally rewrite whole code to be more flexible.
To work with databases it uses "dbx" functions module from PHP. At this moment its tested only with MySQL and prepared to work with this db engine. But in close future i will provide installer, updater and support for other database engines.
But its not end. im working for more enchancements and statistics including tables, charts, maps, etc.
Just download, extract from archive, configure and use it!!
Main features:
- easy instller/updater (for versions >=0.4.4)
- language support - english and polish at this time
- prepared for work with more than one websites/accounts
- root panel for adding and removing accounts
- admin panel for accounts
- all accounts have their own password
- access for viewing stats for all or on passowrd
- showing stats with or without reloads
- timezone correction
- excluded hosts or (sub)domains
Download (0.29MB)
Added: 2006-05-08 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1264 downloads
SQL::Interpolate 0.33
SQL::Interpolate is a Perl module to interpolate Perl variables into SQL statements. more>>
SQL::Interpolate is a Perl module to interpolate Perl variables into SQL statements.
SYNOPSIS
use SQL::Interpolate qw(:all);
# Some sample data to interpolate:
my $s = blue; my @v = (5, 6);
# Variable references are transformed into bind parameters.
# The most basic usage involves scalarrefs (as well as arrayrefs
# preceeded by "IN").
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
SELECT * FROM table WHERE x = , $s, AND y IN, @v;
# RESULT:
# $sql = SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE x = ? AND y IN (?, ?)
# @bind = ($s, @v);
# In certain contexts, an arrayref or hashref acts as a single tuple:
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
INSERT INTO table, {x => $s, y => 1};
# RESULT:
# $sql = INSERT INTO mytable (x, y) VALUES(?, ?);
# @bind = ($s, 1);
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
UPDATE table SET, {x => $s, y => 1}, WHERE y , 2;
# RESULT:
# $sql = UPDATE mytable SET x = ?, y = ? WHERE y ?;
# @bind = ($s, 1, 2);
# In general, a hashref provides a shortcut for specifying
# a logical-AND construction:
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
SELECT * FROM table WHERE, {x => $s, y => @v};
# RESULT:
# $sql = SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE (x = ? AND y IN (?, ?));
# @bind = ($s, @v);
# In general, an arrayref acts as a result set or reference to
# a temporary table:
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
[[1, 2], [4, 5]], UNION, [{x => 2, y => 3}, {x => 5, y => 6};
# RESULT:
# $sql = (SELECT ?, ? UNION ALL SELECT ?, ?) UNION
# (SELECT ? AS x, ? AS y UNION ALL SELECT ?, ?);
# @bind = (1,2,4,5, 2,3,5,6);
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
SELECT * FROM, [[1, 2], [4, 5]]
# RESULT:
# $sql = SELECT * FROM (SELECT ?, ? UNION ALL SELECT ?, ?) AS tbl0;
# @bind = (1,2,4,5);
# Each result above is suitable for passing to DBI:
my $res = $dbh->selectall_arrayref($sql, undef, @bind);
# Besides these simple techniques shown, SQL-Interpolate includes
# various optional modules to further integrate SQL::Interpolate with
# DBI and streamline the syntax with source filtering and macros (see
# the L section):
use DBIx::Interpolate FILTER => 1;
...
my $rows = $dbx->selectall_arrayref(sql[
SELECT thid, date, title, subject
FROM threads
WHERE date > $x AND subject IN @subjects
]);
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use SQL::Interpolate qw(:all);
# Some sample data to interpolate:
my $s = blue; my @v = (5, 6);
# Variable references are transformed into bind parameters.
# The most basic usage involves scalarrefs (as well as arrayrefs
# preceeded by "IN").
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
SELECT * FROM table WHERE x = , $s, AND y IN, @v;
# RESULT:
# $sql = SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE x = ? AND y IN (?, ?)
# @bind = ($s, @v);
# In certain contexts, an arrayref or hashref acts as a single tuple:
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
INSERT INTO table, {x => $s, y => 1};
# RESULT:
# $sql = INSERT INTO mytable (x, y) VALUES(?, ?);
# @bind = ($s, 1);
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
UPDATE table SET, {x => $s, y => 1}, WHERE y , 2;
# RESULT:
# $sql = UPDATE mytable SET x = ?, y = ? WHERE y ?;
# @bind = ($s, 1, 2);
# In general, a hashref provides a shortcut for specifying
# a logical-AND construction:
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
SELECT * FROM table WHERE, {x => $s, y => @v};
# RESULT:
# $sql = SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE (x = ? AND y IN (?, ?));
# @bind = ($s, @v);
# In general, an arrayref acts as a result set or reference to
# a temporary table:
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
[[1, 2], [4, 5]], UNION, [{x => 2, y => 3}, {x => 5, y => 6};
# RESULT:
# $sql = (SELECT ?, ? UNION ALL SELECT ?, ?) UNION
# (SELECT ? AS x, ? AS y UNION ALL SELECT ?, ?);
# @bind = (1,2,4,5, 2,3,5,6);
my ($sql, @bind) = sql_interp
SELECT * FROM, [[1, 2], [4, 5]]
# RESULT:
# $sql = SELECT * FROM (SELECT ?, ? UNION ALL SELECT ?, ?) AS tbl0;
# @bind = (1,2,4,5);
# Each result above is suitable for passing to DBI:
my $res = $dbh->selectall_arrayref($sql, undef, @bind);
# Besides these simple techniques shown, SQL-Interpolate includes
# various optional modules to further integrate SQL::Interpolate with
# DBI and streamline the syntax with source filtering and macros (see
# the L section):
use DBIx::Interpolate FILTER => 1;
...
my $rows = $dbx->selectall_arrayref(sql[
SELECT thid, date, title, subject
FROM threads
WHERE date > $x AND subject IN @subjects
]);
Download (0.056MB)
Added: 2007-04-05 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
933 downloads
POPsearch 0.4.1
POPsearch is a desktop search engine that you can access from anywhere. more>>
POPsearch is a personal search engine that is designed to help you easily organize and find information on your computer. POPsearch lets you index your entire collection of email messages and files. This collection can then be searched remotely from any computer that has a web browser.
POPsearch has features thatre especially appealing to the programming community because it actively allows you to expose and classify data relationships.
Think of POPsearch as a new type of Relationship Engine for your daily flow of information.
With POPsearch, you can easily index your entire collection of email messages and files. This collection can then be searched from any type of web browser.
When POPsearch is configured correctly, you can also access your POPsearch data remotely from any computer that has a web browser.
POPsearch currently supports the following types of data:
- Ascii text
- FrameMaker documents
- LaTeX documents
- Microsoft DBX mailboxes
- Microsoft MBX mailboxes
- Microsoft PST mailboxes
- Microsoft Excel spreadsheets
- Microsoft Word documents
- PDF documents
- Postscript documents
- RTF documents
- Troff files
- WordPerfect documents
When the indexing is finished, the data is available for analysis with any web browser or in a batch mode from the command line.
The following features are available when POPsearch interacts with a web browser:
- If your computer maintains a connection to the Internet, you can access your POPsearch data remotely from any computer that has a web browser.
- The user can navigate through the entire collection of files and email.
- Popular sources of information are displayed as the user navigates through the data.
- References from/to files are expandable.
- The user can search the entire collection or specific directories.
- The user can also narrow the scope of the search to specific types of data or directories.
- The user can save searches, and mark the valuable items thatre contained in the search results.
- Search results can be expanded through the use of a thesaurus.
- Search results can also be expanded through the use of automatic spell checking.
- The system supports wild card searching (e.g. *string or string*).
- When viewing email topics, the user has the ability to "mine" the email for active and casual participants. For each participant, the user is able to determine the types of information that the user is most interested in.
- Email messages are automatically rated for positive or negative content.
- For every file and email message, the system displays a thumbnail representation of the data.
- The user is able to classify files, saved searches, email, and web sites into various personal research topics. The user also has the ability to search in their personal research.
- Comments can be attached to files and email messages.
- The user can apply personal ratings to files and email messages.
- A collection of themes allows the user to customize the look and feel of the POPsearch interface.
From the command line, POPsearch creates HTML output for CGI purposes, or XML output for other applications.
POPsearch is currently designed to run on *nix platforms.
POPsearch is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.
<<lessPOPsearch has features thatre especially appealing to the programming community because it actively allows you to expose and classify data relationships.
Think of POPsearch as a new type of Relationship Engine for your daily flow of information.
With POPsearch, you can easily index your entire collection of email messages and files. This collection can then be searched from any type of web browser.
When POPsearch is configured correctly, you can also access your POPsearch data remotely from any computer that has a web browser.
POPsearch currently supports the following types of data:
- Ascii text
- FrameMaker documents
- LaTeX documents
- Microsoft DBX mailboxes
- Microsoft MBX mailboxes
- Microsoft PST mailboxes
- Microsoft Excel spreadsheets
- Microsoft Word documents
- PDF documents
- Postscript documents
- RTF documents
- Troff files
- WordPerfect documents
When the indexing is finished, the data is available for analysis with any web browser or in a batch mode from the command line.
The following features are available when POPsearch interacts with a web browser:
- If your computer maintains a connection to the Internet, you can access your POPsearch data remotely from any computer that has a web browser.
- The user can navigate through the entire collection of files and email.
- Popular sources of information are displayed as the user navigates through the data.
- References from/to files are expandable.
- The user can search the entire collection or specific directories.
- The user can also narrow the scope of the search to specific types of data or directories.
- The user can save searches, and mark the valuable items thatre contained in the search results.
- Search results can be expanded through the use of a thesaurus.
- Search results can also be expanded through the use of automatic spell checking.
- The system supports wild card searching (e.g. *string or string*).
- When viewing email topics, the user has the ability to "mine" the email for active and casual participants. For each participant, the user is able to determine the types of information that the user is most interested in.
- Email messages are automatically rated for positive or negative content.
- For every file and email message, the system displays a thumbnail representation of the data.
- The user is able to classify files, saved searches, email, and web sites into various personal research topics. The user also has the ability to search in their personal research.
- Comments can be attached to files and email messages.
- The user can apply personal ratings to files and email messages.
- A collection of themes allows the user to customize the look and feel of the POPsearch interface.
From the command line, POPsearch creates HTML output for CGI purposes, or XML output for other applications.
POPsearch is currently designed to run on *nix platforms.
POPsearch is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.
Download (3.1MB)
Added: 2005-04-25 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1643 downloads
Photorec 6.6
PhotoRec is a small tool to recover pictures from digital camera memory. more>>
PhotoRec is a small tool to recover pictures from digital camera memory. Photorec software searches for MOV and JPEG headers, and because there is (usually) no data fragmentation, it can recover the whole file.
It can recover data from CompactFlash, Memory Stick, SecureDigital, SmartMedia, Microdrive, MMC, USB Memory Drives...
PhotoRec is safe to use, it will never attempt to write to the drive or memory support you are about to recover from. Recovered files are instead written in the directory from where you are running the PhotoRec program.
Photorec ignores the filesystem, this way it works even if the filesystem is severely damaged.
It can recover lost files at least from:
- FAT,
- NTFS,
- EXT2/EXT3 filesystem
Digital Camera
PhotoRec has been successfully tested with:
- Canon EOS300D, 10D
- HP PhotoSmart 620, 850, 935
- Nikon CoolPix 775, 5700
- Olympus C350N, C860L, Mju 400 Digital, Stylus 300
- Sony DSC-P9
- Praktica DCZ-3.4
- Casio Exilim EX-Z 750
PhotoRec searchs known file header and because there is no data fragmentation (usually), it can recover the whole file. Photorec recognises numerous file format including:
Archive
- .7z 7zip archive file
- .bz2 bzip2 compressed data
- .gz gzip compressed data
- .rar Rar archive
- .tar tar archive
- .zip zip archive
- Multimedia
- .asf, .wma, .wmv: Advanced Streaming Format used for Audio/Video
- .au Sun/NeXT audio data
- .avi .wav RIFF audio/video
- .bmp BMP bitmap image
- .cdr Corel Draw
- .crw Canon Raw picture
- .ctg Canon catalog
- .dcr Kodak Raw picture
- .dsc Nikon dsc
- .fla Flash Project File
- .gif Graphic Interchange Format
- .jng JPEG Network Graphics
- .jpg JPG picture
- .mng Multiple-Image Network Graphics
- .mov MOV video
- .mp3 MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1 audio
- .mp4 MPEG 4
- .mpg Moving Picture Experts Group video
- .mrw Minolta Raw picture
- .ogg OGG Vorbis audio
- .orf Olympus Raw Format picture
- .pcx PCX file format
- .pef Pentax Raw picture
- .png Portable Network Graphics
- .psd Adobe Photoshop Image
- .qxd QuarkXpress Document
- .qxp QuarkXpress Document
- .raf Raw Fujifilm picture
- .raw Contax picture
- .rdc Rollei picture
- .sit Mikron
- .sr2 Sony Raw picture
- .tif Tag Image File Format
- .x3f Sigma/Foveon X3 raw picture
- .xcf GIMP XCF File
Office
- .doc Microsoft Word
- .mbd Access database
- .odd OpenDocument Drawing
- .odp OpenDocument Presentation
- .ods OpenDocument Spreadsheet
- .odt OpenDocument Text
- .pap Papyrus word file
- .ppt PowerPoint presentation
- .rtf Rich Text Format
- .sda StarDraw
- .sdc StarCalc
- .sdd StarImpress
- .sdw StarWriter
- .slk Sylk, Multiplan Symbolic Link Interchange
- .sxc OpenOffice Spreadsheet
- .sxd OpenOffice Drawing
- .sxi OpenOffice Presentation
- .sxw OpenOffice Text Document
- .txt Text file
- .vis Visio document
- .xls Microsoft Excel
Others
- .asp ASP script
- .bat Batch
- .c C source file
- .dbf DBase 3 (prone to false positive)
- .dbx Outlook Express
- .eps Encasulated PostScript
- .exe MS executable
- .frm MySQL table definition
- .h C header
- .html HTML
- .jsp JSP script
- .MYI MySQL MISAM compressed data
- .pdf Portable Document Format
- .php PHP script
- .pl Perl script
- .prc PalmOS application
- .ps PostScript document
- .pst Outlook
- .py Python script
- .qdf Quicken
- .sh Shell script
- .wab Windows Address Book
Enhancements:
- A new method for handling fragmented data is now used, making recovery more reliable and faster.
- This release can be set to search for files in FAT16/FAT32 unallocated space only, which avoids wasting time recovering files that are still accessible, making the recovery of lost files much faster and more efficient.
- New file formats have been added.
<<lessIt can recover data from CompactFlash, Memory Stick, SecureDigital, SmartMedia, Microdrive, MMC, USB Memory Drives...
PhotoRec is safe to use, it will never attempt to write to the drive or memory support you are about to recover from. Recovered files are instead written in the directory from where you are running the PhotoRec program.
Photorec ignores the filesystem, this way it works even if the filesystem is severely damaged.
It can recover lost files at least from:
- FAT,
- NTFS,
- EXT2/EXT3 filesystem
Digital Camera
PhotoRec has been successfully tested with:
- Canon EOS300D, 10D
- HP PhotoSmart 620, 850, 935
- Nikon CoolPix 775, 5700
- Olympus C350N, C860L, Mju 400 Digital, Stylus 300
- Sony DSC-P9
- Praktica DCZ-3.4
- Casio Exilim EX-Z 750
PhotoRec searchs known file header and because there is no data fragmentation (usually), it can recover the whole file. Photorec recognises numerous file format including:
Archive
- .7z 7zip archive file
- .bz2 bzip2 compressed data
- .gz gzip compressed data
- .rar Rar archive
- .tar tar archive
- .zip zip archive
- Multimedia
- .asf, .wma, .wmv: Advanced Streaming Format used for Audio/Video
- .au Sun/NeXT audio data
- .avi .wav RIFF audio/video
- .bmp BMP bitmap image
- .cdr Corel Draw
- .crw Canon Raw picture
- .ctg Canon catalog
- .dcr Kodak Raw picture
- .dsc Nikon dsc
- .fla Flash Project File
- .gif Graphic Interchange Format
- .jng JPEG Network Graphics
- .jpg JPG picture
- .mng Multiple-Image Network Graphics
- .mov MOV video
- .mp3 MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1 audio
- .mp4 MPEG 4
- .mpg Moving Picture Experts Group video
- .mrw Minolta Raw picture
- .ogg OGG Vorbis audio
- .orf Olympus Raw Format picture
- .pcx PCX file format
- .pef Pentax Raw picture
- .png Portable Network Graphics
- .psd Adobe Photoshop Image
- .qxd QuarkXpress Document
- .qxp QuarkXpress Document
- .raf Raw Fujifilm picture
- .raw Contax picture
- .rdc Rollei picture
- .sit Mikron
- .sr2 Sony Raw picture
- .tif Tag Image File Format
- .x3f Sigma/Foveon X3 raw picture
- .xcf GIMP XCF File
Office
- .doc Microsoft Word
- .mbd Access database
- .odd OpenDocument Drawing
- .odp OpenDocument Presentation
- .ods OpenDocument Spreadsheet
- .odt OpenDocument Text
- .pap Papyrus word file
- .ppt PowerPoint presentation
- .rtf Rich Text Format
- .sda StarDraw
- .sdc StarCalc
- .sdd StarImpress
- .sdw StarWriter
- .slk Sylk, Multiplan Symbolic Link Interchange
- .sxc OpenOffice Spreadsheet
- .sxd OpenOffice Drawing
- .sxi OpenOffice Presentation
- .sxw OpenOffice Text Document
- .txt Text file
- .vis Visio document
- .xls Microsoft Excel
Others
- .asp ASP script
- .bat Batch
- .c C source file
- .dbf DBase 3 (prone to false positive)
- .dbx Outlook Express
- .eps Encasulated PostScript
- .exe MS executable
- .frm MySQL table definition
- .h C header
- .html HTML
- .jsp JSP script
- .MYI MySQL MISAM compressed data
- .pdf Portable Document Format
- .php PHP script
- .pl Perl script
- .prc PalmOS application
- .ps PostScript document
- .pst Outlook
- .py Python script
- .qdf Quicken
- .sh Shell script
- .wab Windows Address Book
Enhancements:
- A new method for handling fragmented data is now used, making recovery more reliable and faster.
- This release can be set to search for files in FAT16/FAT32 unallocated space only, which avoids wasting time recovering files that are still accessible, making the recovery of lost files much faster and more efficient.
- New file formats have been added.
Download (1.0MB)
Added: 2007-05-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
934 downloads
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