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Column: New computers crash, too — and sometimes they crash harder

Q: I have a fairly new iMac with a Fusion hard drive that crashed.聽 When I took it to the Apple store, they said that data recovery wasn鈥檛 possible and that I had to start from scratch.聽 Is there a data recovery option?

A: Apple鈥檚 Fusion technology is a proprietary version of what鈥檚 become known as 鈥渉ybrid hard drives,鈥 because they combine traditional magnetic storage technology with the faster solid-state memory (similar to USB flash drives).

Hybrid storage systems can be one of the best upgrades you can make to any computer, because for a little more money than a traditional hard drive, they can greatly improve the overall performance.

They accomplish this by storing often-used programs and files on the faster solid state portion and less-used files on the traditional drive. The intelligence built into the drive monitors your activity and automatically moves programs and files to the faster portion as you use the computer.

Apple鈥檚 Fusion technology, however, does have a dark side. Unlike traditional hybrid hard drives made by companies such as Seagate and Western Digital, the Fusion鈥檚 proprietary system makes it very difficult to reconstruct data when it fails.

Apple stores lack any of the sophisticated data-recovery tools and knowledge to even attempt such a difficult task, so all they can try are a few simple ways to try to access your files.

Even the most sophisticated data recovery labs would have a difficult time reconstructing your data because of the proprietary nature of the Fusion drive. This is not to say that it鈥檚 impossible — just incredibly difficult, and, as a result, generally very expensive.

Many newer storage technologies are proving to be more difficult to recover data from when they fail.

I can remember when 40-megabyte hard drives were considered 鈥渂igger than you鈥檒l ever need.鈥 Today, the smallest iPhone or typical USB flash drive has 400 times the storage.

Traditional mechanical drives that store data magnetically have been around so long that the methods for recovering data from them have evolved tremendously, making a successful data recovery more likely.

When solid state memory devices such as flash drives, camera cards and SSDs fail, physical damage to the actual circuitry can often make recovery extremely difficult or even impossible. When you throw in proprietary technology that connects and stores the data on hybrid devices, like what Apple is doing, yet another layer of complexity is added, making recovery even that much less likely.

The moral to this story is clear: The newer and more sophisticated your storage system is, the more important it is to have a well thought-out backup scheme in place.

Incorporating the 3-2-1 method of backup should eliminate the need to ever pay for expensive data recovery: 3 copies of your data on 2 different devices with at least 1 copy off-site.

The best configuration is an external hard drive as your second copy (and local backup) with an online backup service such as Carbonite as the third copy that’s off-site.

Ken Colburn is the founder and CEO of . Ask any tech question on or on .

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