Urgent help needed with an elementary school Mac

wgoldfarb

Senior member
Aug 26, 2006
239
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I am not an IT professional, but I am knowledgeable enough to volunteer at our local public school to help them as needed (I developed and run their website, and provide "as-needed" support with the occasional computer glitch). This is a very small school with an extremely limited budget, and apparently there are no other parents in the school with better knowledge than mine -- they are stuck with me :)

Today they contacted me with an urgent problem. One of the teachers has been using an iMac desktop for her classroom work for the past two years. This iMac literally holds every file created to serve her teaching life. Since May, she has apparently been having problems with it (freezing, lines across the screen?). They called the tech support company that the local public school system uses, but their arrival came one day after an error screen appeared that could not be resolved. The error message told them that the computer needed to be restarted, but when they tried rebooting the machine it only came back to the same error screen.

The tech support guy ran a "diagnostic" and concluded the problem was caused by a virus (I think that a more likely cause is a failing hard drive). He (foolishly, I believe) reimaged the drive -- and in the process managed to lose all her data files. the computer now boots up, but they lost all the data. This guy could be of no more help, so they called in yet another tech support company. This second company ran some type of file recovery software (I don't know which one) and "recovered" the data -- but all of the "recovered" files seem to be corrupt or damaged. My guess is that the "reimage" done by the first tech support guy must have overwritten many of the files that were on the drive. It was at this point that they contacted me.

I told them that the first thing they need to do is shut the computer off to prevent overwriting any data that might still be recoverable on the drive. It was also suggested they replace the drive with a new one, to prevent any further data loss (I also believe that the current drive is failing, so this will also prevent any future problems).

Since my knowledge of data recovery is limited and my knowledge about Macs is close to none, I am somewhat at a loss as to what possible data recovery options exist, or what their next steps should be. Given the "reimage" done on this drive I am uncertain about the likelihood of success of any affordable software recovery solutions. On the other hand, since this is a small public school with a very limited budget, I am reluctant to recommend a recovery service which could cost them up to $2,000.

So, what would you suggest are any feasible next steps? Someone suggested contacting a recovery company for a diagnostic (he mentioned OnTrack?) to at least assess whether any data is recoverable and whether the cost would be justified.

Any other ideas or suggestions? Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks!

 

pcgeek11

Lifer
Jun 12, 2005
22,231
4,934
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Dude,

I wish I had an answer, but that sounds like a no win situation to me. I hate getting a job after someone elese has mucked it up so badly.

I still cannot understand why anyone would have their " Entire Life " saved on a hard disk and not have it backed up somewhere.

pcgeek11
 

wgoldfarb

Senior member
Aug 26, 2006
239
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0
Pcgeek

I know. I hope she learned to do regular backups from this. I've tried to drive the point home by repeatedly asking, in different ways, whether she really didn't have a backup.

I've also set expectations low, suggesting the data might be lost for good. If it was just personal data I might not be so concerned, but i'd hate for the kids (2nd grade) to be affected.
 

websurfermom

Junior Member
Nov 16, 2009
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freepages.genealogy.rootsweb
The general rule is that PC people can't do Macs and Mac people can't do PCs. The first thing the teacher has to do is get a REAL Mac technician on the job. I'm told that files on a Mac are never completely lost, that they can be recovered by somebody who knows what they're doing. She may have to get someone from a larger city, since Mac users seem to be a small % of the population and a large city has a larger population. Switching off the Mac is a good idea. It would be an excellent idea to find a REAL Mac technician immediately! (I'm a former Mac user.)
 

Malak

Lifer
Dec 4, 2004
14,696
2
0
A harddrive is a harddrive, regardless of the manufacturer of the computer. The data is probably lost. The initial tech that wiped the harddrive should be fired, I would be calling that company to complain immediately. That is completely inappropriate, everyone knows you backup data FIRST.
 

RebateMonger

Elite Member
Dec 24, 2005
11,586
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Pcgeek
....but i'd hate for the kids (2nd grade) to be affected.
It might be one of the best things to happen to them. Maybe they'll go home and say, "Mommy, my teacher lost everything she had on her computer at school. The teacher said we should make backups of all our stuff. Do we have backups?"

At this point, if you are going to do something about the loss, I'd recommend engaging a professional data recovery house. But I wouldn't expect much.
 
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