data is not gone until completely over written, and even then it can still sometimes be retrieved.
well, if data is overwritten, i think you need a miracle to get it back
about the question, yes after a format you need a bit more work to get data back than deleting the partition.
a format only overwrites a small portion of the drive, "the index"
If the entire drive is overwritten with new data, you cannot get it back.
the cache is like ram in your computer, it will be lost when the power goes.
unwritten sectors? then it is not overwritten, i guess.
it has long been known that overwriting the disk (modern disks anyway) is more secure than physically destroying it.
Just because you haven't written any user data to a sector it doesn't mean the OS hasn't threaded or cached something there.
Also, if you have many different copies of the same file an older version can be restored, well with other filing systems.
How are you going to put back together a cracked platter?
SirKenin said:The only way to prevent something like that is to do file shredding, minimum 7 passes.
We even have the ability to pull data off of broken or burned platters in many cases.
nyhk said:You cannot possible recover data that has been overwritten.
First off, it requires very special equipment.
therefore you cannot possible recover anything with simple software.
How can you do file shredding?
What equipment would that be?