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Atari Mega Archive 1
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Atari Mega Archive - Volume 1.iso
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diskutil
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diskfix2.lzh
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diskfix2.man
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Wrap
Text File
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1991-02-21
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3KB
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62 lines
What should have been in the .LZH file:
DISKFIX2.PRG The disk fixer.
DISKFIX2.MAN This file.
What this is:
Let's say you're working on your computer, in the wee hours of the morning.
All of a sudden, you get this alert box on your screen, saying "Data on the
disk in drive A: may be damaged." Or maybe you go to save your program and
the fileselector pops up full of garbage. Your heart will likely skip a
beat or two. Your eyes will jump from the screen to the disk drive and back
again. How could this, your trusted computer, let you down in your hour of
need?
Okay, first of all, don't panic. You're probably going to lose some of that
stuff on the disk. But this program will help you recover quite a bit from
that damaged disk--maybe even everything. Just pray that this program isn't
on the disk that gets damaged.
To use the program, run it from any resolution. Dispense with the title
information; you already knew who wrote the program (me) and you're more
interested in saving your disk. Choose the drive with the damaged disk,
and the drive to store the new files on. (If you only have one floppy
drive, it is vital that you specify A and B as your two drives!) Put
the damaged disk into the drive you've just selected for it to be in. The
format of the damaged disk will be displayed; if you get some bizarre
numbers for the format (a standard format is 80 or 82 tracks, 9 or 10
sectors per track, and 1 or 2 sides) then forget it, the boot sector is
fried. Select "Cancel" from the alert box, thus exiting the program, and
pray for a miracle. If the format looks okay, select "Proceed" and the
program will begin working. Since the directory may be screwed up, the
files are listed on the new disk by number. It is up to you to figure out
what's what; files will have their lengths rounded off to 1024-byte amounts.
But at least you'll have the data.
If you do only have a single drive, I really would recommend using a RAM
disk... otherwise you'll be swapping disks all day. There is a new version
on the way.
If you have a fried hard drive, this program should work. I have only
tested this program on an intact hard drive, so I cannot vouch for its
performance with a truly messed up drive. I was not about to toast my
hard drive just to see if my program would recover it. I should warn you,
though, that it will definitely NOT work if the hard drive is formatted to
more than 16 Meg (as in with TOS 1.4). Sorry. That too will be fixed in
a future (and soon forthcoming) version.
I wrote this program because I desperately needed it. It saved my butt--
with any luck it might just save yours.
-dmj
Other programs I've written, which you ought to have:
DOUBLER - turnes single sided disks into double sided disks, without
damaging anything on the disk.
PURGER - quickly erases entire disks. Very handy.
REPLAY22 - Fantastic digitized sound player and converter.