After opting to Create a new log file and selecting the correct disk, the Proceed option was selected followed by the partition table type. Recovery with the command line TestDisk was attempted first. In our original tests with TestDisk and PhotoRec 7.2 in September 2022, we used an unmountable 16GB SanDisk Cruzer Blade USB thumb drive with files of various types was connected to a standard USB 2.0 port on a Dell G5 5505 SE laptop running Windows 10. Recovered partition images can be checked in TestDisk using the terminal. This works in largely the same way as the CLI tool, with the options displayed in a single window rather than a step-by-step series of commands. Over 440 file types have been recorded, meaning that if the data is intact, it can in theory be recovered with PhotoRec. Meanwhile, PhotoRec can find a vast selection of file formats, such as common image files (JPG, PNG, etc.), Microsoft Office files, OpenOffice file formats, PDFs, and TXT files. PhotoRec also has a graphical user interface (GUI) available to make photo recovery easier (Image credit: CGSecurity)
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