![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Most type of OS supported(Windows/WinPE/Linux/Unix/ChromeOS/Vmware/Xen.)ġ100+ ISO files are tested ( List). X86 Legacy BIOS, IA32 UEFI, x86_64 UEFI, ARM64 UEFI and MIPS64EL UEFI are supported in the same way.īoth MBR and GPT partition style are supported in the same way. You can also browse ISO/WIM/IMG/VHD(x)/EFI files in local disk and boot them. You can copy many image files at a time and ventoy will give you a boot menu to select them. With ventoy, you don't need to format the disk over and over, you just need to copy the image files to the USB drive and boot it. Even then, you may spend many hours trying to recover data and not even get that much of it back.Ventoy is an open source tool to create bootable USB drive for ISO/WIM/IMG/VHD(x)/EFI files. ddrescue will copy only data that can be read and can re-try bad blocks again and again, sometimes taking days to try to copy something. You could try ddrescue, but you'd of course need to get past booting Ubuntu. You may have to pay $$$ to a data recovery service that can extract the data from the drive platters, if it is worth that much to you. Or are you choosing CD/DVD from a boot menu on the computer to override trying to boot the hard drive? Is CD/DVD drive set first in the boot order on your computer (so it tries to boot a CD before it tries to boot the hard drive?). Or maybe you're not choosing the right boot device I'm not quite clear what you mean about booting the Ubuntu CD. If you are now able to boot Ubuntu immediately, it's probably the hard drive causing the boot freeze. You can confirm this by powering off the computer, unplugging the hard drive inside, and trying to boot again. It sounds like it is nearly dead (failing hard drives routinely get worse the more you use them). : Input/output ^C - Tried to might be stuck trying to examine your failing hard drive. Tried accessing the drive via terminal, brought up ls But it gives me this sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/sdcĭd: error reading ‘/dev/sda’: Input/output errorĠ bytes (0 B) copied, 0.00159157 s, 0.0 kB/s I tried doing the command: sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/sdc, which should] go from the internal drive to a 1tb external drive. I tried cloning the drive using this tutorial: Some other files do some errors as well when I try to open them, but they arent as important. Except for where the pictures are located. When I try and access the internal disk (/dev/sda), most of the files are there. I realised recently that I should try and access the disk with ubuntu live cd to recover many things including photos that, if i lost, would end me up in a lawsuit. ![]()
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