The first step ActionFront engineers take is to understand the system's file format. Then, they determine how the data was stored. That information provides the foundation for rebuilding the system.
John Willis, IT manager at Strategic Merchandising Partners, used FreeFix in September to recover data from a crashed PC hard drive. The PC belongs to Cheri Wells, the general manager and co-founder of the Ventura, Calif., merchandising service provider for software and gaming companies. Reconstructing the data from scratch would have cost valuable time. "It [FreeFix] saved a month," says Willis. The service also proved a bargain: The company had originally taken its crashed hard drive to Ontrack Data International Inc., a similar data-recovery services provider, which was going to charge $1,200 to recover the data. George Bell, manager of technical documentation at Adac Laboratories in Milpitas, Calif.--a Phillips Medical Systems company that makes medical cameras used to diagnose various illnesses--turned to ActionFront's premium data-recovery service when his Mac workstation crashed last summer, seemingly obliterating six months worth of documentation for technical brochures. After a local Macintosh shop and another firm failed to recover the data, Bell did a search on the Web and came across ActionFront. "Two days later, they got at least 95% of the disk recovered, and saved me months of work," says Bell, who was happy to pay $800 for the premium service.
Stay connected and informed by visiting the CA Solutions Center Community!

Become a member today for instant access to free InformationWeek research, expert advice, peer perspectives, and more on the following topics:
- Application Performance Management (APM)
- Security Management
- Mainframe 2.0
- IT Automation
- Service Assurance
Also, visit our Government and Financial Services groups to see how these technologies apply specifically to those industries.
NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.