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Helpful answers
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Oct 17, 2014 8:23 PM in response to LokoMixby Loner T,Yes, please. Please post the list of partitions you see for recording purposes. Save the images that you are posting, if steps need to retraced.
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Oct 17, 2014 8:31 PM in response to LokoMixby Loner T,Click on Continue. In the link for Testdisk step-by-step, there is also a Deeper Search, which is much slower, but if you notice the start/end of MS data is different from previous "Quick Search" window. This means Yosemite "moved" the partition and corrupted the NTFS Bootloader/manager.
Scan this one first after you select it and "P: List Files".
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Oct 17, 2014 8:53 PM in response to LokoMixby Loner T,I suggest a "Deeper Search" . Please see the Testdisk step-by-step page. It is the best resource for this part. You need to look in each MS Data that you find using this. It can take a couple of hours.
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Oct 17, 2014 9:09 PM in response to LokoMixby Loner T,This shows you how the blocks actually moved, if you look at it from bottom up where the last entry is t=0, the one above that is t=1, then t=2 and so on. The size is the same, so the partition is being moved a chunk, committed, moved a chunk, committed and so on and so forth.
This is a really bad design decision by Bootcamp engineers. This was done when Mavericks came out. The same mistake is being repeated again.
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Oct 17, 2014 9:23 PM in response to LokoMixby Loner T,With the iOS8, iTunes, Bootcamp, Yosemite, WiFi issues, etc., every early adopter is at risk till patches and stability ensue. If Apple would support SL 10.6.8 on current hardware, I would prefer that. It is still the most stable OS X release that I know of. OS 9 was also wonderful.
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Oct 18, 2014 7:48 AM in response to LokoMixby Loner T,Scroll down to the first MS Data partition and look for familiar files. Please repeat for each MS data partition.











