UFS Explorer RAID Recovery is a multifunctional top-level software developed primarily for recovery of information lost and deleted from standard, nested, custom and vendor-specific RAID configurations and RAID-based storage systems like NAS and DAS. Nevertheless, it can bring equally efficient results in restoring photos, documents, audio, video and other types of files from such widely used data storage media as internal and portable SSD and HDD, USB memory drives and memory cards.
The program supports various file systems of Windows (NTFS, FAT, FAT32, exFAT), macOS (HFS+, APFS) and Linux (Ext2-Ext4, XFS, Extended format XFS, JFS, ReiserFS, UFS, UFS2, Adaptec UFS, big-endian UFS, Sun ZFS, Btrfs) operating systems, as well as simple and stripe ZFS volumes of BSD/Solaris.
UFS Explorer RAID Recovery automatically detects and assembles arrays in a virtual mode using metadata on their drives and also gives the possibility to assemble them manually using the embedded RAID builder tool. The supported RAID types are the following:
standard (RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 1E, RAID 3, RAID 5, RAID 6, etc.); nested (RAID level 10, 50, 60, 50E, etc.); custom layouts created with RDL or Runtime VIM; Drobo BeyondRAID, Synology Hybrid RAID, Btrfs-RAID and RAID-Z; RAID configurations used in popular NAS devices produced by Drobo, Buffalo Technology (TeraStation, LinkStation), Synology, QNAP Systems, etc.
Additionally, UFS Explorer RAID Recovery works with storage technologies like Apple Fusion Drive, Windows Dynamic Disks and Storage Spaces, Linux LVM and mdadm, as well as virtual disks (VMware, Hyper-V, VirtualBox, QEMU and XEN) and disk images of various formats.
Moreover, it embeds a disk imaging tool and a couple of extra instruments, including a file previewer (for documents, images and PDF files), a hexadecimal viewer, two file search options (quick and advanced), etc.
Based on our record, Rufus seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 6 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
For HDDs, you'll want to use a program called DBAN (Darik's Boot and Nuke) to wipe it. It's included in the Ultimate Boot CD, and you can make that a bootable USB instead by using Rufus. Source: almost 2 years ago
Someone below commented to use rufus. That tool is meant for flashing OS install images, but just using the format section should work fine. I use GParted's livecd, although that might be a bit overkill for a quick format. Source: almost 2 years ago
I would just download the ISO by itself. You don't really need the "assistant". Just mount the ISO with Rufus. Source: over 2 years ago
Maybe download the installers for Fedora & Tumbleweed and boot to the USB Drive you install the .iso file on to 'try' a distro first instead of destroying you current setup for the totally unknown world of linux. Use Rufus to create the bootable USB drive and HashTab to check the .iso files checksum. https://rufus.akeo.ie/. Source: almost 3 years ago
For HDDs, you'll want to use a program called DBAN (Darik's Boot and Nuke) to wipe it. It's included in the Ultimate Boot CD, and you can make that a bootable USB instead by using Rufus. Source: about 3 years ago
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