Well, Im in the same boat, I got a SD memory card corrupted and very
im****tant pics still there, corrupted and damaged, already "recovered"
with R-Studio and with Easeus the only two proggies that really
recovered the garbage in the card; but, like you i have a bunch of
useless jpgs unreadeable, at least you can see the images I see
nothing, still looking; what ive read around you can manually replace
the jpg headers with a hex editor using the headers of a same pic with
the same quality (ie: a shoot with the same camera using the same
quality) in order to unlock the image, but since jpg are stripped you
have to repeat the procedure several times in the same pics, havent
tried yet this method, if you find any solution, please contact me
thanks...
On 17 nov, 03:22, "Robbie Hatley" <lonew...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> I asked the following question here several days ago, but got no reply.
> So I'll try again.
>
> I've been looking for a good program which can repair damaged Jpeg
files.
> No, not "recover"; REPAIR. I've googled phrases such as "repair jpeg
file"
> and come up with over one million hits -- all of them worthless.
They're
> all data-recovery programs. They just return the corrupted files (with
> corruption still intact) as being "recovered". Worthless garbage.
>
> What I need is something that can repair Jpeg photos which have
> one or more single-bit errors in them somewhere, causing all parts
> of the image rightward and downward from the error to become
> garbled, like so:
>
>
http://www.well.com/~lonewolf/Original-Image.jpghttp://www.well.com/~lonewolf/Damaged-Image.jpg
>
> Unfortunately, quite a number of my photos have become corrupted
> like that over the years, due to power spikes or cosmic rays or whatever
> knocking one bit out of alignment while copying, moving, defraging, etc.
> It would be nice to be able to repair these damaged files.
>
> I did find one program which ostensibly is capable of allowing the user
to
> hunt-down and fix damaged bits manually. The program is called
> "Repair Jpeg", by Wim Vanmaele. However, it is extremely difficult to
use.
> It is basically just a binary editor with a picture display. To
successfully
> repair a damaged Jpeg file with this program apparently requires some
> pretty low-level knowlege of Jpeg compression and Jfif file formats.
> I haven't actually successfully repaired a photo with it yet.
>
> Surely something more "automated" is out there somewhere? Anyone here
> know of any software that can do this?
>
> --
> Cheers,
> Robbie Hatley
> lonewolf aatt well dott com
> www dott well dott com slant user slant lonewolf slant


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