DriveSavers Recovers Six Billion Files for Apple Users
In 25 years
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on February 6, 2012 at 3:03 pmDriveSavers, Inc. has recovered over six
billion data files for Apple users since the company’s inception over
twenty-five years ago.
Six billion data files are equivalent to the amount of
data stored in the Library of Congressd. Videos, digital photos, financial files, personal documents, address
book contacts, calendar entries and music are examples of the types of data
that is recovered.
Scott Gaidano, president of DriveSavers, lost business critical
files on a Mac floppy disk many years ago. Disappointed and frustrated, Gaidano
along with Jay Hagan, decided to attempt to recover the data which lead to the
two men starting their own data recovery business.
Today, DriveSavers recovers
data from iPads, iPhones, iPods and essentially any storage device (Apple or
non-Apple related) that has suffered common or catastrophic data loss. It has pioneered the data recovery industry by demonstrating best
practices, methods and security standards for recovering data safely and
securely.
As innovative Apple products continue to emerge and become immersed
in the mainstream of businesses and consumers, DriveSavers anticipates that
more critical data will be stored on these amazing devices … and lost – due to
user error, physical damage, mismanagement and software or hardware failure. It anticipates that recovering the data will become progressively complex,
especially with the use of SSD technology in many of these products such as the
iPad and iPhone. DriveSavers has expertise, technology and capabilities to recover data from flash memory-based solid-state devices.
This year at Macworld/iWorld, DriveSavers displayed a special
enhanced version of its museum of ‘disk-asters’
featuring a laptop that was crushed by the earthquake in Haiti.