On our 16GB card, the scan took a full 30 minutes, regardless of the amount of recoverable media on it. ![]() For starters, Phoenix Photo Recovery scans every sector on the media, meaning that it takes time. We ran the test on the SD card which was plugged into a card reader through a USB 2.0 interface. Advanced options are available simply by clicking on the “advanced” button. Stellar has managed to nail the primary requirements of most users and clubbed them into a set of buttons that are available on screen, but that doesn’t mean they’ve forgotten about the power-users. Using the software is made super easy with only a handful of buttons, a feat that is not easy if you ask us. The user interface is extremely self-explanatory. Once the scan completes, all the recoverable media is grouped by type and can be individually selected for saving. If you click on advanced recovery options, you can define which type of files types to scan for, each being segregated into its corresponding media type. If there is a card reader (SD card, CF card etc) attached, it simply pops up as a new drive, ready to be scanned. Once it opens, it lists all drives that are connected to the PC. The user interface of Phoenix Photo Recovery is one of the simplest we’ve seen.
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