Let’s stay focused on the question here!) So save the lecture you’re 100% absolutely right, but that doesn’t help me at the moment. Unfortunately, all my backups were on the server itself. (Yes, yes, I absolutely should have done complete offsite backups. Unfortunately, our hosting provider experienced 100% data loss, so I’ve lost all content for two hosted blog websites: But enough about how we got here, let’s learn something from it.īut before you get too judgmental or start shaking your head, I offer up this link on StackExchange by none other than Jeff Atwood himself: In the course of testing a WordPress backup plugin I lost our new blog and all of the content – the irony of this is not lost on me. The ability to recover images from cache becomes a pretty valuable skill when you COMPLETELY ERASE A WEBSITE WITH NO BACKUP. Right now you’re probably wondering to yourself “but why would anyone need to do that? I don’t really see the purpose here”. That may seem a little obscure or unhelpful but believe me, it can be necessary. I learned a cool trick over the weekend – recovering images from the browser cache, specifically from Google Chrome.
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