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At the age of 29, after living a modest life in New York City for 3 years, I was looking to travel far and wide. This birthday would be my last one in peace before I set off for a longish stint abroad. At that point, I knew that I would not return to the USA again until my air tickets were due for terminal illness or death. Before then came into view, something unexpected happened―I got robbed of over $10 000 USD worth of laptops and money which by mistake was left out on top of my table at work! As you can imagine, this was an enormous blow to me. However, one of my co-workers was able to get my stuff back for me. Although the money was not recovered, at least I got back all of my laptops on which I had not backed up any data yet. So, it came to pass that on the last day on the job before departure for Central Asia on 20 April 2010, that I carried out some more work on this laptop. Although I had not backed up anything yet on its hard disk, it did have all of my writings in them in their latest form along with all of my once-in-a-lifetime collection of photos and videos. However, I did not realise this until after I had left for Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. I was in Almaty, Kazakhstan, when I decided to transfer this data off of my work laptop to my backup laptop which is Mac OSX. Mac OSX is the only operating system that happens to be integrated with an excellent photo management tool called iPhoto. This program allows one to import photos very easily. The problem arose when I tried the same thing on my Windows 7 laptop―it could not read the files at all! Although I tried several things (even tried plugging it into another computer) nothing worked. This is a very critical issue for me since the contents of all of the files were meticulously organised and numbered. I have an entire file that lists out what all of these things are. There were more than a thousand of them! Furthermore, while I was at it, I also organised an entire folder that contained all of my photos in alphabetical order by filename. This way it would be very easy to edit all of them when coming back online (I will explain why in a moment). Now, lets not beat around the bush any longer―the reason for this article today is to bring to light what happened next after this catastrophe. I did not realise that something else had happened to this laptop which did not allow it to read the files at all. The file system of this laptop has since then completely corrupted. I humbly request that you take a look at this file (click here). The file is almost two gigabytes in size, so I'll give you the first 5 megabytes before connecting it to your computer―trust me if your computer was functioning, it would be able to read the rest of them within seconds! The other ten megabytes are an extremely important part of this article. It was created on 31 March 2010 by me while I was home in New York City. cfa1e77820
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