Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!uunet!fed!arccs2!m1jjh00 From: m1jjh00@fed.frb.gov (Jeffrey J. Hallman) Newsgroups: comp.unix.i386 Subject: Re: Norton Utilities Message-ID: Date: 9 May 90 08:42:51 GMT References: <67@grumbly.UUCP> <1990May8.000451.4054@maxed> <1990May9.064608.14464@smcnet.smc.edu> Sender: news@fed.FRB.GOV Organization: Federal Reserve Board Lines: 11 In-reply-to: byoder@smcnet.smc.edu's message of 9 May 90 06:46:08 GMT In article <1990May9.064608.14464@smcnet.smc.edu> byoder@smcnet.smc.edu (Brian Yoder) writes: >Unlike the DOS version, you will have to have the "unerase" programs >previously installed, to "unerase" a file. This is true, but on the other hand you are guaranteed of getting the file back intact unlike the DOS versionwhere often files came back corrupted. Can you tell us a little bit about how this works? Does it slow down writing to disk?