Home Forums Chat Forum Can I recover photo’s from the SSD of my dead Mac Book Pro?

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  • Can I recover photo’s from the SSD of my dead Mac Book Pro?
  • thorpedo
    Full Member

    I had a 2010 MacBook Pro which had been updated with an SSD a couple of years ago. A couple of months ago the battery gave up and expanded with such force that it burst the aluminium case open. I did not try to start it up after this but removed the SSD and disposed of the computer.

    I no longer have a Mac having replaced it with a cheap Windows laptop.

    Does anyone know of a reliable recovery service?

    I’m assuming at this point that the SSD is not damaged. I also have a portable drive with the Time Machine backups on it.

    Any advice would be appreciated.

    1
    bensales
    Free Member

    Assuming the SSD isn’t encrypted using FileVault, there’s no reason why you couldn’t just plug it in to another computer using a SATA to USB adapter and copy the files off.  If you were using Apple Photos or iPhoto, the files are just held in the normal file system.

    1
    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    If you have a Time Machine back-up they will be on there. Just plug into another Mac and navigate the folders to find them.

    1
    bassmandan
    Full Member

    Do you know anyone with a Mac? Get a sata to usb adapter, plug your drive into their Mac and away you go. You can even boot their Mac from your drive if it makes things easier.

    1
    Kamakazie
    Full Member

    You should be able to use a file reader on Windows if you don’t have access to a Mac.

    If it’s more recent it will be APFS file system, but I’m not sure if there’s any decent free reader software.

    Older ones use HFS+ which there used to be a few good free readers for.

    I’ve done this before for photos & vids.

    thorpedo
    Full Member

    Thanks all for your advice, I will ask around to see if anyone has a Mac that they could let me connect the drive to. I will report back later…

    bensales
    Free Member

    The only thing about plugging it into a Mac, is a Mac might try and respect the file permissions on the drive. Plugging into a Windows machine its unlikely to. And, yes, I forgot you might need some software for Windows to understand the file system, but that’s easily available.

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