Contacts

Photos from lost mobile phones. The owner of a stolen iPhone with iCloud turned on received a photo of the thieves ... in shorts. Admire the central library of Stuttgart, Germany. Christian Frank for this serene photo received an award in the category "Archit

The program recovers files regardless of type. Supporting any storage media running FAT, NTFS file systems, the utility recovers digital photos regardless of the reason for their loss. The program will restore the contents of the files, the date of creation and editing, the directory tree of the disk. The innovative algorithm will recover more data than the programs of the nearest competitors.

  • Price: 2 999 rub.

NTFS Recovery™ 3.0

The program recovers photos from NTFS partitions. The utility supports hard drives, memory cards and USB flash drives. Recommended after formatting, virus attack, accidental deletion of files, as well as after file system errors, failure of storage media. Use Hetman Partition Recovery if you need to recover photos deleted from FAT and NTFS partitions.

  • Price: 1 999 rub.

FAT Recovery™ 3.0

The utility recovers digital images from logical partitions controlled by FAT. The program works with any media, including hard drives, memory cards for cameras, tablets and USB flash drives. Recommended after formatting, virus attack, accidental deletion of files, and after file system errors. Use Hetman Partition Recovery for universal data recovery from FAT and NTFS.

  • Price: 1 999 rub.

Photo Recovery™ 4.8

Restore photos from a memory card of a camera, a computer in a step-by-step mode. The utility is limited in its ability to recover only digital image files, but supports FAT and NTFS file systems. Hetman Photo Recovery recovers files from camera memory cards, hard drives, external drives and USB flash drives. If you cannot recover deleted photos with this program, please use Hetman Partition Recovery.

Just stealing someone else's smartphone is half the battle, you also need to understand the basics of its work so as not to be ridiculed throughout the country. With the filing of the Daily Mail, most of the UK media are actively discussing the personal life and color of the underpants of two unlucky thieves.

In a company smartphone they recently stole Apple the function of automatic sending of pictures to the cloud was activated iCloud, and recently, with its help, more and more phone thieves unwittingly collect dirt on themselves.

The story of Becky Brinklow, a 27-year-old nurse, began unpretentiously - one past weekend she dined at a restaurant on the waterfront of Southend, Essex. Her attention was directed to her one and a half year old son, so all that she managed to get out of her memory was that two strangers approached her table and one cheekily stole a slice of french fries from her plate. And while Brinklow, surprised by the impudence, came to her senses, the second one stole iPhone, more likely.

It did not cause any problems, except for a momentary chagrin - the device was insured and the very next day Becky Brinklow was happy to unpack a brand new smartphone from the box. And when you decide to sync your device with your account in iCloud, I was quite surprised by the increased number of photos. Since she herself did not photograph any men in family shorts, it turned out to be easy to figure out the situation. The function of automatically sending new pictures works properly on the phone in the hands of thieves, who, it seems, are not aware of it at all. The vault is regularly updated with photos of two "machos" - athletic build youngsters, not burdened with intellect, who take pictures of themselves on the beach, in bars, etc.

And then the continuous triumph of i-technologies begins - Apple It is worth thanking the thieves for such an extraordinary advertisement. Miss Brinklow's greatest joy is that with the loss iPhone she did not lose the photographs of her young son, which were preserved in the cloud safe and sound. In an interview with reporters, the girl sincerely praised iCloud for the fact that almost all the important information from her stolen smartphone was saved. Parting with the phone itself does not make her very sad - by using the service Find iPhone(Find My iPhone), she has already locked the device.

It should be noted that for the majority of poorly educated criminals iPhone it's just an expensive accessory, not a high-tech device. And therefore, the number of similar incidents since the beginning of summer has been growing almost or not in an arithmetic progression. For example, in the Tumblr microblogging service, the blog “The Life of the Stranger Who Stole My Phone” has been enjoying stable popularity for a month now. A young German tourist, having arrived with friends in Ibiza, first of all got drunk in a bar, and then went swimming naked - the natural result was the loss of all valuables, including the iPhone. However, the automatic upload function did not disappoint this time either - upon returning home, the tourist started a microblog, where he regularly publishes fresh photos taken by the thief. As it turned out, he lives in Dubai and does not even suspect about his newly acquired fame in the world - the young man's personal life is in full view.

(IPPAWARDS).

Judges selected the best shots from thousands of shots and announced the winners of the eighth annual IPPAWARDS Photo Contest.

A wondrous combination of light and shadow highlights this shot by Daniele Colombert, who won first place in the Portrait category

“I take photos with my phone because this is the future,” writes Jesse Alkire on his website. Here is the shot that brought Alkira first place in the category "News and Events"

Photographer Song Khan lives and works in Chengdu, China. This frame brought him victory in the category "People"

This mesmerizing image, taken by Xu Liying, shows the drying of fish. The frame won in the category "Food"

André Malerbie won first prize in the Panorama category with this fantastic orange cloud

Spanish contestant José Luis Saez Martinez started using an iPhone instead of a DSLR in 2011. This shot earned him first place in the "Other" category.

Sefi Bergerson has worked as an advertising and commercial photographer for more than 10 years, and now lives in India and shoots in the documentary genre. The judges named this photo the best in the Animals category.

“I took this photo in Silvermine when I was photographing the aftermath of the fire that devastated Cape Town in March of this year,” wrote 23-year-old Amy Patterson, winner of the Flowers category.

Yvonne Naughton won first place in the Nature category, taking this shot during one of her early morning walks in Snee Oosh Beach, Washington

Jeremy Kern works at a children's hospital in Washington DC and photography is his creative passion. He took this picture during a trip to Haiti and won in the category "Kids"

Robert Radizick won first place in the Sunset category with this shot from Trieste, Italy

Chris Belchina won the Landscape category with a photo taken in Colorado's Great Sand Dunes National Park.

It's been a crazy winter. Snowdrifts in Michigan were over three and a half meters high when Heather Goss took the shot that won him first place in the Seasons category.

Ahmed Saeed writes that the village of Gharb Sehel is filled with "colorful houses, kind, warm-hearted people and stunning views of the Nile". He won first place in the category "Travel"

Ecuadorian Fabio Alvarez was relaxing on the beach in Rio when he took this shot that won the Lifestyle category.

Admire the central library of Stuttgart, Germany. Christian Frank for this serene photo received an award in the category "Architecture"

Essential photo of Cindy Bask won first place in the category "Still life"

Ruarid McGlynn took a series of photos of trees in Qatar, but this shot is perceived in a special way

Yvonne Lou came in third with a photo of passengers who fell asleep on the train while traveling to New York. “It looks like this couple doesn’t need anything else in the world,” says the photographer

Second place went to David Craik, who took great patience to capture these starlings with a shadow on a white wall. "Some might think I'm crazy, but one of the most exciting things about wildlife photography is the anticipation," he says.

The first place went to Michal Koralewski from the Polish city of Poznan, who says that he could not help photographing this musician, because “his life story was almost read in the wrinkles on his face”

Liked the article? Share it