![]() Hard to solve, or not ata ll, and therefor stays without answer. (I say that for a reason, because you regularly mark absolutely useless replies as answers. Maybe you know of a program that checks if a file has a lot of zeros staff: Please … never mark a reply as answered, if does not absolulety apply or if it is just useless troubleshooting gibberish. SFC/Scannow checks your Windows installation for errors and corrects them. After the computer starts, check whether the problem is resolved. Of the corrupted files are filled with null, where once was data (resulting in JPEGs that can be displayed, but are partly broken in its display). Click the Services tab, click to select the Hide All Microsoft Services check box, and then click Disable All. Or maybe there is another possibility? I also noticed that parts I don't know if files on NTFS store a hash within to quickly see if it is corrupt, I seriously hope so. That is why I am looking for a solution that checks if files may possibly be corrupt. Unfortunately it's not only few files I could check by hand. I have a very old backup thatĬould be used to recover only the broken files, because most of the data has been updated meanwhile. When you begin to notice random errors, issues during boot or Windows components are not working as they should on your computer there is a good chance that. ![]() Unfortunately all those corrupt files have been copied in my files history, which is now (partly) corrupted, too. ![]() I had a creeping hard drive crash last week and I noticed that many, many files are broken due to defect sectors.
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