Thank you, Laurie and Linda!
Okay, so here is the update.
My friend and her husband got into my PC on Saturday via a remote access program that they had installed on here back in 2007. They were the ones who gave me this PC 4 years ago, fully loaded with the programs I needed for work and with extra memory - basically, they extended the life of a 7-year-old PC and made it run as good as it could possibly run for a PC that old. They are both computer experts and technicians, so I can get a lot of info from them (and help) that other people pay $$$ for.
These remote access programs are wonderful! I highly recommend them for a variety of reasons. My friends are in New York, and they were able to access my PC and look around to see what caused all of my files to disappear.
First, Liza (funatdisney) and her husband tried to help me, and her husband talked me through (on the phone) certain places to look for my lost files. That was very kind of them, so a BIG thank you to Liza and her DH.
All of those tries guided by Liza's husband were unsuccessful. None of my lost files appeared.
So when my New York friends got into my PC and probed around, they discovered that it had undergone a "major crash" last Thursday (though still not a total crash, or else I wouldn't even be able to get online or into anything on here).
After the crash, apparently when I turned on the PC again, it automatically started 'scanning' all the files and documents on the PC....and then it renamed them. It renamed ALL of them.
To put this in perspective for you, think of it this way - I have one client I have been doing work for over the last 4 years. Let's just say that all of his work was rescued post-crash (which it wasn't, but let's just say it was). That means that when the PC starting scanning the files, it would rename 4 years worth of work and assign random numerical file names - like 00004626 or something - to each of them.
Nothing that was rescued post-crash has the name I gave it...which means that I won't know what anything is until I go through each file, one by one, and name it. So I have no idea what anything is, and how much I have lost or retained.
To put that in perspective for you, now consider this:
Not only did I have 4 years of work for one client on this PC, but I also had work for several other clients on this PC.
And I had photos. LOTS and LOTS and LOTS of photos from various sources (some were scanned in by my All-In-One printer/fax/scanner/copier; some were from CD's; some from my camera; some sent to me by other people over the years) - 1600-ish photos alone just from my December 2010 DLR trip. Photos from my November 2010 DLR trip. Photos from years and years and years of DLR trips that I scanned in, ranging from 1972 - 2001.
All of my Catalina photos, ranging from 1988 to 2003 - vanished.
All of my Bret Michaels/Poison/Sunset Strip photos from 1985 - 1992 - vanished.
And I am not even mentioning all the various personal documents and other stuff I had saved.
So you now have an idea of what kinds of stuff was lost. Many, many documents for clients (in MS Word and in Word Perfect) and many, many personal documents and many, many photos.
So...basically, Heather and Walt (my New York technician friends) found a lot of the files that were lost. They were now saved as ".CHK files." (By the way, if you ever, ever have a PC crash like I did and you can't locate your files, ask a technician to look for the .Chk files on your PC - they should have the software to do that). But they also saw that 2200 files (yes, over 2000 files) had either been corrupted OR deleted for good. I have no idea what was in those 2200 files. I may never know exactly.
H&W ran a program to locate lost files and came up with the .Chk files - which were separated into hundreds of different groups/folders.
In each .Chk group/folder, there are at least a couple hundred files.
H&W then performed a file restore function with some other software, and that was 'supposed' to restore the .Chk files to my PC.
We got through ONLY the first CHK group so far. Heather restored the files from that first group to my PC, and I have been laboriously going through each and every file in that group to see what was restored. I have hundreds more groups and thousands more files to look through as they are restored, one by one.
I have discovered that the PC restored things in an odd way. For example, in this first group I looked at, I saw random files from 2007, and then random documents from just 2 weeks ago - and a whole lotta stuff missing in between. Plus, I am only finding MS Word documents and some photos (recent photos from
Disneyland 2010). MOST of the documents and MOST of the photos are still missing.
And it also seems to have made like 50 (literally) copies of some documents, while there are only 2 copies of something else, and 1 copy of something else. Very odd.
Again, I have to go through each and every one of these found files to see what is what, as nothing has its original title anymore.
It's like looking for a needle in a haystack.
So now, tonight, Heather is supposed to restore the next group of CHK files to my PC so I can begin the process of going through those and seeing what's in there. Since there are hundreds of CHK groups, you can see how time-consuming this will be.
But if I can just find even a handful of my lost photos (the older ones) and some of the crucial documents I use or work with again and again, I will be satisfied with that. I can't give up looking until I find some of these things.
This is why people send their machines out to repair places - no one has the time, patience, expertise or energy to deal with this kind of thing on their own. Or people just give up and let things go after a crash.
But, given all the time it has taken me so far, can you imagine what I would be paying a repair place to do this stuff?
There MAY be other hidden files somewhere in the PC that are different from CHK files. If so, those will probably never be found.
So the bottom line is that many things were probably just lost forever - remember those 2200 files I mentioned earlier that were corrupted or lost. Some of the stuff is there, but I won't know which things until I go through it all, which could take another month.
Some things I can get back again - I am a cyber hoarder, so I keep most of my e-mails (both sent and received). I will be able to go back into my sent e-mails and find
some documents that I sent to clients. I have stored photos in various places like Facebook or Photobucket or MySpace or wherever, so I can get
some of them back that way.
But there are things that are lost forever - like a song that a friend sent me last year. And some photos sent to me by other friends that I do not have in e-mails will be lost forever. It makes me sick to think about what was lost, to be honest. Unless these lost files and photos show up in one of the next CHK groups we restore, they are lost forever.
In the meantime, I can't really work on this PC. so I am losing money. First of all, I don't have any of the older documents that my client would need to work on. And to store anything NEW (start a new document) on this PC is only running the risk of overwriting the older files I may be able to find. Plus, this PC is very unstable now. It's not acting right, and it could be on the brink of crashing again - even worse next time.
So the bottom line is that I have to restore what I can right now and then when this is done, worry about getting a brand new computer somehow, so I can resume working.
No Disney gift card hoarding for me for the foreseeable future, sadly.
