Computer Solutions

  • Computer Solutions
  • Contact Us
  • Our Reviews
  • Repair
  • Used Computers
  • Computer thoughts blog
  • Laptops
  • Onsite
  • Consulting / Training
  • Remote Support
  • Virus removal
  • Equipment / upgrades
  • Recycling
  • Backup and recovery
  • Printer supplies
  • Recomendations
  • Hablamos Espanol!
  • Help

Change this setting to make your computer safer

3/31/2015

0 Comments

 
0 Comments

Facebook Security

3/23/2015

0 Comments

 
You may not know this but Facebook keeps a record of every search you have ever done.  i assume that the primary reason is to give you targeted advertising, but if anyone ever has access to your account they can see it too.


Fortunately you can remove those searches, either individually, or all at once.  


Go the drop down arrow near the top of your Facebook page.  
Click on "activity log".
Click on the more link.
Click on the search link 


There you will see everything you have searched.  If you want to delete just one or two you can choose the delete to the right of each search.  If you want to get rid of everything there is a clear searches link at the top.




0 Comments

Donate wiesly

3/16/2015

0 Comments

 
Here is a new scam that I just learned existed.  Fake donation sites.  Lots of times these will spring up around large natural disasters but they can happen anytime.    These sites look just like the real thing but will cause real problems.  Besides just stealing your credit card they may install malware or passwords.


How do you get to these sites?  A couple of ways.  1) You may have searched for something like The Red Cross and the first site that popped up was wrong.  2) You may have clicked on an ad for the site but it was a fake. 


The best way to be sure you are at the correct place is to type their actual web address.  For example The Red Cross is www.redcross.org  If you do go by way of a search engine just make sure the address, on the top of your browser, begins with the proper name.  Any site like give.redcross.com will be fake.


Also no charity will ever ask you for a password, social security number, birth date, etc.  If they are asking those questions they aren't legitimate.


Also remember the same thing can apply for telemarketers posing as charitable organizations.  If you aren't sure you can check them out at www.ftc.gov/charityfraud or bbb.org


Another great recourse to find good charities and advice about safe donating is charitynavigator.com
0 Comments

I have a tablet - Why would I want an E-reader?

3/9/2015

0 Comments

 
Do you read e books?  They are terrific as you can have ready reading material in your phone, computer or tablet available anytime you like.  You can even have a special e-reader for these books.  If you read a lot I really recommend one of these.


The e-reader comes in a variety of brands and styles.  From a very simple Kindle reader to the Fancy, full color Fire with lots of different brands.  I recommend the simpler, black and white versions and here is why.


The black and white e-readers are actually a completely different technology from any other tablet.  They use a special method of displaying things called e-ink.  Instead of lighting up an entire screen and populating the screen with different colors, this e-ink displays black characters on a blank screen.  This has several advantages:


1)  This device uses a lot less electricity.  It doesn't even take any for it to have the screen running.  It only uses a little bit when you change the page


2)  Because there is no light to wash out you can see this, just like a book in direct sunlight.


3)  This is very close to a normal paper and is much better on your eyes.  No light in the screen means you aren't looking at glare.  No lit screen also means that you don't have the problems associated with looking at a lit screen disrupting your sleep patterns.


Yes you will need a night light if you are going to read at night but everything else will be more comfortable.
0 Comments

Why do hard drives fail?

3/2/2015

0 Comments

 
Data Recovery 101: Platters By Ashley Toy, 28th January 2015 Share this: Introduction: Data Recovery 101

Gillware is rolling out a new blog series titled “Data Recovery 101″, in which our bloggers will take a closer look at each of the different components of a hard drive and explain how they work, how they fail and how we recover the data from each failure situation.

The series will include five of the main components of a hard drive: platters, read/write heads, spindle motor, firmware and electronic components such as the control board and other circuitry. When a hard drive is functioning properly, these parts work together in an intricate balance. The parts are very delicate, and even the slightest malfunction can have disastrous consequences.

We see a variety of different failures on a daily basis, both logical and mechanical, and most failures can be tied back to one of the five components mentioned above. In the blog series, we’ll analyze each failure to give you a better idea of what’s going on inside a failed drive. But we won’t stop there, of course. We’ll also give you an inside look at some of the advanced techniques Gillware uses to recover data from different failure situations. This post will focus on the part of the drive that stores the data itself: the platters.

What are the platters?

Platters are the thin, circular discs made of glass or aluminum  inside the sealed hard drive enclosure. Depending on the capacity and age of the device, a hard drive can contain anywhere from one to 10 or more platters. Each platter surface is coated with an extremely thin magnetic substrate that stores the user’s binary data (1s and 0s) in the form of a magnetic field. When these 1s and 0s are arranged in a particular order, the device can read recognizable data like pictures, documents, spreadsheets and more.

How do the platters work?



In order to store information, the binary data must be written to the magnetic surface of the platter. To access the data, it must be read. Another crucial hard drive component, the read/write head assembly, is responsible for both of these functions. The read/write heads are tiny sensors that float just 5-10nm above the surface of the platters on a cushion of air generated by the platters spinning at thousands of rotations per minute.

When operating normally, the airflow inside the hard drive chassis is smooth and consistent, resulting in the steady flight of the read/write heads over the platter surface. Although hard drives are not technically hermetically sealed devices (except for some of the new, ultra high density HDDs being built), the internal environment does need to remain free of dust and other contaminants to ensure that the heads can float unobstructed over the platters.

How do the platters fail?

In certain situations, the read/write heads can crash and contact the delicate platter surface. Since the heads are so close to the platters, even a tiny speck of dust, dirt or a fingerprint can have adverse effects on the operation of the drive (which is why it’s so important not to open hard drives outside of a cleanroom environment).

The heads can crash for a variety of reasons including spindle motor failure,power surge or sudden loss of power, among others. While this can be an entirely separate issue, the real problem can be damage to the magnetic substrate caused when the heads contact the platters and spread microscopic debris throughout the chassis which can become embedded in the platter surface. In serious cases, rotational scoring occurs, leaving score marks in the magnetic substrate when the read/write heads touch the surface as the platters rotate.

Though the damage may be microscopic, the debris continually impacts the read/write heads and eventually destroys them, making the drive inoperable and the data inaccessible. Even if the heads are replaced, the damage to the platters must be addressed, or any replacement heads will just get destroyed as well.

How can you recover data from damaged platters?

Sometimes, if the damage to the platters is too severe, the data stored on them can be unrecoverable. For example, some of the more extreme cases we’ve seen in our data recovery lab involve shattered platters, melted platters, or platters that have had the magnetic substrate completely removed from them from such a high degree of rotational scoring. When the platters are broken, incinerated or stripped of their coating, there is simply nothing to recover the data from.

In situations where the magnetic substrate is largely intact, Gillware utilizes sophisticated equipment used by hard drive manufacturers, re-engineered for the purposes of data recovery, to measure and eliminate platter debris and imperfections.  The process is known as burnishing. In order to undergo burnishing, the platters are removed from the hard drive chassis in a controlled, cleanroom environment. The platter is mounted on a custom fixture that spins the platter in excess of 10,000 RPM, which is nearly twice as fast as the platters rotate in an average hard drive. A robotic arm passes a specially designed burnishing head over the platter, which works as a precise scrub brush to remove debris and repair damage on the platter surface. Then the platters are remounted, the new heads are installed and the drive is calibrated.

Although it will not be in perfect working order, the drive is now operational to a point at which the data can be successfully extracted from the device and recovered.

To learn more…

In the posts to come, you’ll learn more about the different hard drive components we discussed in this post (read/write heads, spindle motor and more) and how they work together to create a fully functioning hard drive. Additionally, we’ll show you what can go wrong with each of these components and how Gillware recovers data from different situations of hard drive failure.

If you’re interested in learning more about how the burnishing process works, check out our burnisher blog post.



About Ashley Toy Marketing Specialist at Gillware Data Recovery and Gillware Online Backup. December 2013 graduate of the University of Wisconsin in Journalism and Spanish. Cheerleading and social media enthusiast.

0 Comments

    Author

    Larry Goodman is the owner and founder of Computer Solutions.  In his spare time he likes to play on and shop for computers.

    Archives

    October 2019
    October 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    November 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    January 2017
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    March 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed