I’m going to click on iPhone Data Recover, the big box on the left, to proceed.Īt this point I’ve already plugged in my iPhone X via a Lightning USB cable, and the programs’ recognized it and identified it both, as you can see. To proceed, FonePaw needs to scan and analyze the iPhone storage. Easily done with a click on “Start Scan”. This takes a while…Īfter a few moments, or, possibly, a few minutes depending on the size of your iPhone and speed of your Windows computer, you’ll get a summary of everything that’s on your phone, all neatly organized and displayed:Īs you can see, I have 326 photos on my Camera Roll, I’ve deleted 30 photos (which the program can recover), 81 photos identified as being from apps (probably Instagram), 33 text message discussions, and 67 message attachments. Let’s start with the iMessage attachments. To check a specific category, simply click on its name on the list that’s on the left side of the window. Just like on a Mac, you can click on an image to get a larger version of it, as I will do with the top left image on the list. Oh yeah, it’s from a gaming afternoon a few days ago. I want to save this image onto my Win10 computer. The secret here is to right click on any image or item and get the context menu, which includes a darn handy option “uncheck all”: Go back to the main screen, however, and everything’s checked. The program will ask where I want it saved: Now I can easily just check the image in question and click on the big “Recover” button on the lower right.
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