Panic set in. I tried free tools—Recuva, TestDisk. Recuva found filenames but recovered corrupted video files (green pixelated blocks of nothing). TestDisk gave me a command-line interface that looked like it belonged on a 1980s mainframe. After four hours of frustration, with my deadline looming in 48 hours, I caved and looked for a paid solution.
My stomach turned to ice. The drive was now completely empty. No Recycle Bin for external drives.
If you’ve just deleted files and haven’t touched the drive, use with any free tool first. But if you’ve formatted the drive, repartitioned it, or see a “RAW drive” error in Windows—EaseFab is worth every penny.
It was a Tuesday evening when my digital world nearly ended. Not with a bang, but with a click. A single, exhausted mis-click.
That’s when I found . The First Impression The website was refreshingly no-nonsense. No “download our $99/year subscription” pop-ups immediately. They had a free trial that actually let you see what it could recover before paying. I downloaded the installer (clean, no bundled bloatware—a relief).
8 minutes. It found 12,000+ files. But filenames were generic ( file_0001.mov ). My heart sank—was this just another index-scraper?
I’d been editing a documentary short for a client—weeks of footage from a cross-country road trip, raw interviews, drone shots over the Grand Canyon at sunset. My external 4TB drive was the holy grail. I decided to clean up my main SSD, dragging folders to the Recycle Bin. “Delete permanently?” Windows asked. I clicked “Yes.” Only then did I realize: that wasn’t my download folder. That was the mapped drive. That was the external drive.