![]() ![]() In addition, if a drive is corrupt or damaged, Phoenix can attempt to recover the damaged files and continue cloning operations where Disk Utility and some other cloning tools would just fail and tell you the operation couldn't be completed with no detailed explanation. This means that if the size of the partition on a clone target doesn't exactly match or exceed the overall size of the source volume, the clone will succeed anyway, provided there's enough free space on the target volume. ![]() Unlike Disk Utility's binary block copying, cloning on Phoenix is file oriented. Because Phoenix uses sequential file copying rather than binary block copying, the newly created volume will be fully defragmented (applicable to hard drives only). All you need to do is format a target volume or drive, select the source you want to clone, and then click a few buttons on the user interface, and the cloning will proceed. In its cloning mode, Phoenix can be used to easily transfer the contents of one volume to another. All applications are now fully certified for use on Mac OS X versions from 10.6 (Snow Leopard) up through 10.11 (El Capitan). Phoenix may be obtained as a standalone product or in one of our fully featured version of Scannerz, which include Scannerz, Phoenix, FSE or FSE-Lite, and Performance Probe. Phoenix is an operating-system tool that allows a user to perform basic cloning operations, retrieve undamaged files from a damaged hard drive, attempt recovery of damaged files from a drive, identify which files on a drive are damaged, and create an independent emergency boot volume, known as a Phoenix Boot Volume. ![]()
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