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Data Recovery Capabilities

Stellar Information Systems Ltd is a ISO 9001:2000 certified data recovery services company having over 15 years of experience in data recovery and over 1000,000 satisfied customers over 35 countries has a Stellar data recovery services has worldwide presence direct & through our partner network. Stellar has data recovery services has a direct presence in US, Europe and Asia and all its data recovery centers are equipped with Class 100 Clean Room.

Stellar has understanding of the technology requirements for successful data recovery and has well equipped Class 100 Clean Room and trained professionals having expertise in logical, invasive & non-invasive data recovery and can recover data from all encrypted hard drives, peripheral devices , storage devices & operating systems whether they are legacy systems or state of art.

Stellar has built over the years capabilities in recovering data from virtually any kind of data loss situation. Data Loss caused due to following can be successfully recovered by stellar data recovery services

Data Recovery Service Process

At Stellar we respect your valuable time and has evolved a strict documented process as per ISO 9001:2000 norms to ensure confidentiality, consistency & transparency each time every time. Stellar uses Read-Only processes on your crashed media so that your media status is not changed irrespective of the recovery process outcome.

Whenever you send a hard drive for recovery, it is considered as a confirmed order.

Stellar Data Recovery Services

Lost Critical Data!! – Stellar will help recover your data!!

Stellar Information Systems Ltd., formed in 1993 is one of the leading data recovery company offering data recovery services in domestic and international markets. Stellar has over 15 years of data recovery experience and has left its recovery footprints across various continents like Asia, North America, Europe, & South East Asia. Stellar has been offering successfully service in niche space of data recovery in the domestic & international markets and has been offering data recovery services to many fortune 500 companies.

Stellar has understanding of the technology requirements for successful data recovery and has well equipped Class 100 Clean Room. Stellar has trained professionals having expertise in logical, invasive, forensic data recovery and can recover data from all encrypted hard drives, peripheral devices , storage devices & operating systems whether they are legacy systems or state of art.

Stellar can help recovery your data from:
Single Hard Drives | Laptop Data Recovery | Desktop Data Recovery

Multi-disk storage devices:
Multi-disk RAID systems | Network Attached Storage Devices (NAS) | Storage Area Networks (SAN)

Damaged Hard Drives:
Water Damaged Hard Drives | Fire Damaged Hard Drives | Virus Damaged Hard Drives | Flood / Hurricane Damage Data Recovery

Specific Types of Data:
Email Data Recovery | Exchange Recovery | Operating Systems Recovery | Encrypted Data Recovery

Email Repair Software

DBX recovery tool to repair and restore damaged DBX files. This DBX recovery software effectively handles all DBX corruption scenarios.

* Recovers all DBX file objects such as emails, notes, contacts, tasks and journal.
* Compatible with Microsoft Outlook Express 6.0, 5.5, 5.01 and 5.0.

Windows Data Recovery Software V4.1

powerful data recovery application to recover lost, deleted, or corrupted data, hard drive partitions, photos, audios and videos in almost all logical data loss scenarios. Incorporated with striking set of elements like disk cloning, e-mail recovery and drive status, the software supports FAT32, VFAT, NTFS and NTFS5 file systems.

* Designed for Windows 7 RC1, Vista, 2003, XP and 2000.
* Raw Recovery from CD and USB drives.

The Cheap Things Article
  1. Buy a pack of gum at any store that accepts atm cards, get cash back to avoid ATM service fee
  2. Leveraging a close family member’s death to decrease a bill
  3. Reading the entire magazine at the bookstore
  4. Parking at a meter with time remaining
  5. Bringing your own wine (not on the list) to a restaurant so you only pay corkage
  6. Using the toilet in Olive Garden without buying anything
  7. Buy CD, copy CD, sell the original on eBay
  8. Join and re-join AOL under different names to get an infinite number of free hours
  9. Ordering only a cup of soup at a French market-style restaurant and rounding out your meal with 5 pieces of complimentary bread and jam.
  10. Camping out at a buffet through two meal times
  11. Taking lots of ketchup sachets from Burger King to avoid buying a bottle
  12. Getting your friends to write letters to your boss describing make-believe scenarios in which you provided fabulous service in hopes that you will get a raise.
  13. Cashing long-distance carrier’s promotional checks when you have a pick-freeze enabled on your phone
  14. Failure to inform your server of unbilled beer/food
  15. Sneak into a high school for the cafeteria
  16. Buying tickets online so you can choose “Student” and get in for 5 bucks
  17. Doubling-up on a sale that is one per customer
  18. Spackling the wall holes in your apt with toothpaste to get security deposit back
  19. Double-occupying a hotel room after paying single price
  20. Sneaking one more friend into the drive-in theatre
  21. Taking advantage of a new lower price by buying new merchandise and returning it with your old, high-priced receipt.
  22. Sneaking food into the theatre.
  23. Dodging the conductor on an Amtrak train
  24. Renting a house for $600 and getting four roommates who pay $150 each.
  25. Opening a joint bank account with your grandmother to qualify for the no-fee senior’s package
  26. Sneaking into a hotel to use their pool/gym
  27. Borrowing unused bandwidth from afar via wireless networking
  28. Ordering as many pay-per-view movies as your dish will allow with the phone line unplugged, since you’re canceling service anyway.
  29. Buying a CD, scanning the cover art, downloading all the songs & returning it unopened
  30. Failing to notify a utility company for unbilled service
  31. Buying a CD, recording it and returning it
  32. Paying for one movie and seeing two
  33. Taking two newspapers at the newsstand
  34. Removing your front license plate to avoid red-light/traffic camera detection
  35. Using the collect-call verification process to get information transmitted for free
  36. Putting the correct address on the return address of an envelope so it gets sent “back” for lack of postage
  37. Stealing pens/paperclips/notepads from work
  38. Buying one cup of coffee at a diner and sharing the refills with your friend
  39. Dreaming up an imaginary price-match challenge at Circuit City
  40. Making long distance personal calls from the office of the guy who just quit
  41. Using the postage meter at work
  42. Stealing milk crates
  43. Unauthorized sharing of an internet account
  44. Tearing expired coupons in such a way that the expiration date is missing
  45. Get the dole, (unemployment) but do something crafty like make furniture or baskets and sell them at weekend markets for cash.
  46. Establishing underground trade relations between neighboring retail worker
  47. Stealing cable with a pirate cable box or dish
  48. Inflating the scope of damage after a car accident to get more money/repairs
  49. Lying about your kid’s age to get discount tickets
  50. Eating seven free samples instead of buying something
  51. Lying about your age to get a senior discount
  52. Wearing a dress one time to the big occasion, then returning it
  53. Eating Brach’s Candy or grapes in the supermarket, and then not paying for them
  54. Bringing Tupperware into a buffet and sneaking out with a second meal
  55. Returning a book after you have read it.
  56. Lying about the quality or exaggerating the faults of a flight so you can get frequent- flyer miles
  57. Buying a video camera and then returning it after your kid’s birthday party
  58. Picking flowers out of the park/neighbors yard instead of buying them
  59. Using your companies FedEx account number for non-work related shipping
  60. Kinko’s textbook manufacturing
  61. Repeatedly buying and returning a textbook until the course is over.
  62. Sneak overdue video rentals back into the store, place them on the shelf, then prove to the clerk as you check another video out that you *did* in fact return the video on time by showing that the video is there on the shelf and available for rental.
  63. Sharing food at a buffet with your non-paying friend
  64. Downloading unregistered software
  65. Hiding CDs behind the display in a store so that you can come back by on SuperSale Monday and buy them at half-price
  66. Re-using your cup at Taco Bell by refilling with soda again and again on different trips
  67. Joining a CD club with a fake name for the twelve CDs for a penny
  68. Switching the item numbers in the bulk foods aisle to get items for less
  69. Re-using old/discarded city bus transfers.
  70. Sabotaging a piece of hair after your salon perm/hair color to get a refund, then going back and fixing the piece you wrecked with a box perm or color from K-Mart.
  71. Buying a computer, then opening it up and taking the ram out. You take it back, and claim that there was no ram in the computer, and insist that they give you the proper amount.
  72. Filling your water cup with soda at Carl’s Jr
  73. Telling people at work PCs or printers are broken so they tell you it’s okay to take them home
  74. Saying it is your friend’s birthday to get a free dessert
  75. Using some other company’s FED-EX account number
  76. Falsely claiming you found a hair/bug/it was cold/ to get a free meal
  77. Ripping buttons off of clothing to get discounts
  78. Buying a coat at Marshall’s or Ross and returning it to Nordstrom for cash or credit
  79. Saving a webpage from an online store to disk, editing the sale value, then printing and price-matching the product at a real store
  80. Making counterfeit stamps for your buy-ten-get-one-free coffee/video/carwash card
  81. Buying a second answering machine that looks like your old model, and returning the old one in the new box
  82. Sabotaging your hard drive to take advantage of your extended warrantee before it expires
  83. UPC/price tag peeling or replacement
  84. Switching plastic sleeves on new and used LP’s with cheaper ones
  85. Starting nuisance lawsuit for settlement money
  86. Calling for credit for long distance calls to numbers you aren’t going to call again
  87. The night before you move out of your apartment, tell the pizza delivery person that the order is very late and that the shift manager told you not to pay. Tip $3.00.
  88. Writing the wrong room number on the hotel bar tab
  89. Returning your digital camera to the store after removing the extra stick of memory.
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A-Z Injury Topics

acute_injuryThe care of the acutely injured is a public health issue that involves bystanders and community members, health care professionals, and health care systems. It encompasses prehospital emergency medical services; emergency department assessment, treatment, and stabilization; and in-hospital care surgery and medical management among all age groups. The importance of acute injury care became increasingly clear in the aftermath of the events of 9/11 and subsequent mass casualty events.

Because CDC recognizes that injuries continue to occur, despite our best efforts at prevention, the Division of Injury Response (DIR) at CDC’s Injury Center seeks to improve outcomes for those who have survived severe injuries and to improve acute injury care practices. To meet this challenge, DIR works with national and international organizations spanning the continuum of injury prevention and acute injury care, including those responsible for emergency medical services and emergency medicine and trauma surgery, other public health organizations, other federal agencies, and the corporate sector.

Traumatic Brain Injury Topics

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious public health problem in the United States.  Each year, traumatic brain injuries contribute to a substantial number of deaths and cases of permanent disability. Recent data shows that, on average, approximately 1.4 million people sustain a traumatic brain injury annually.

A TBI is caused by a bump, blow or jolt to the head or a penetrating head injury that disrupts the normal function of the brain. Not all blows or jolts to the head result in a TBI. The severity of a TBI may range from “mild,” i.e., a brief change in mental status or consciousness to “severe,” i.e., an extended period of unconsciousness or amnesia after the injury. The majority of TBIs that occur each year are concussions or other forms of mild TBI.

CDC’s research and programs work to prevent TBI and help people better recognize, respond, and recover if a TBI occurs.

Road Traffic Injuries

The Reality

We all want to keep our children safe and secure and help them live to their full potential. Knowing how to prevent leading causes of child injury, like road traffic injuries, is a step toward this goal.

Every hour, 150 children between ages 0 and 19 are treated in emergency departments for injuries sustained in motor vehicle crashes. More children ages 5 to 19 die from crash-related injuries than from any other type of injury.

Thankfully, parents can play a key role in protecting the children they love from road traffic injuries.
Prevention Tips

One of the best protective measures you can take is using seat belts, child safety seats, and booster seats that are appropriate for your child’s age and weight.

Know the Stages

* Typically, babies should be placed in rear facing car seats until they are at least 1 year old and weigh 20 pounds.
* When babies move into front-facing car seats, they should remain in these seats until they are at least 4 years old or weigh 40 pounds.
* Children should be seated in booster seats from about age 4 to age 8, or until they reach 4’9″ tall.
* All children ages 12 and under should be seated in the back seat of vehicles.

A Tip for Parents of Teens If you’re a parent of a teen who is learning to drive, sign an agreement with them to limit risky driving situations, such as having multiple teen passengers and driving at night.

Helmets can Help Children should wear motorcycle or bike helmets any time they are on a motorcycle or bicycle.

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