eProvided in Popular Mechanics: Recognized for Real Data Recovery

eProvided founder Bruce Cullen featured in Popular Mechanics magazine, 2005
eProvided founder Bruce Cullen in Popular Mechanics, 2005

Back in 2005, Popular Mechanics put eProvided founder Bruce Cullen in its pages for the kind of work that's hard to fake: recovering data from drives and devices that everyone else had written off. Two decades later, that recognition still reflects what we do every day — chip-level recovery on failed flash, SSDs, hard drives, and phones, for everyday customers and high-stakes clients alike.

Press coverage doesn't recover anyone's data. But it's a useful signal: it tends to follow labs that actually solve the hard cases rather than the ones that market the loudest. eProvided has been doing this since 1999 — over 27 years — and the work, not the marketing, is what keeps putting us in the conversation.

Why eProvided Earns the Coverage It Gets

We've recovered data from newsworthy and genuinely difficult situations — physically destroyed drives, water-damaged cards, and storage other labs declared unrecoverable. The common thread is hardware-level skill: when a controller dies or a chip cracks, software is useless, and the only path back to the data is repairing or bypassing the failure and reading the raw memory directly.

That's the same approach whether the device is a consumer USB stick or something far more demanding. If it stores data and it has failed, we can usually help — and we tell you honestly, after a free evaluation, what's recoverable before you owe anything.

From Consumer Drives to NASA Missions

The recoveries that draw attention aren't only consumer jobs. eProvided is used by NASA: we recovered the mission data from NASA's Helios prototype after its Pacific crash, and we recovered pre-launch data for the DAVINCI Venus mission. We also consult on future missions, including upcoming Mars work and the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, and our work has supported the U.S. Department of the Navy and the FBI.

That experience comes back to every ordinary recovery we take on. The discipline required to handle one-of-a-kind, mission-critical storage is exactly what protects a family's only copy of their photos or a business's failed drive of records. A device doesn't have to be flying through space to be irreplaceable — for most people, the data on a dead phone or a corrupted card is every bit as priceless, and we treat it that way.

What We Recover Today

Modern storage is denser and harder to recover than the drives of 2005 ever were. We work at the chip level across the devices people depend on now:

Each generation of storage packs more data onto a smaller, more delicate chip, which raises the stakes of a single failure and pushes recovery further out of reach of off-the-shelf software. That gap — between what consumers can do at home and what a real lab can do at the chip level — is wider now than it was when Popular Mechanics first wrote about us, and it's exactly where we work.

How to Choose a Data Recovery Company

The press coverage matters less than what it points to: how you tell a real recovery lab from a storefront that will make things worse. After 27 years of cleaning up after the wrong choice, here's what we'd tell a friend to look for:

  • Real hardware capability, not just software. Ask whether they work at the chip level — reading raw NAND, repairing controllers, micro-soldering. Anyone can run an undelete tool; almost no one can recover a physically failed device.
  • A track record you can verify. Years in business, named press, real reviews. A lab that's solved hard cases for decades has seen failures yours resembles.
  • An honest, no-pressure evaluation. You should learn what's actually recoverable before you commit money — not get quoted a flat fee sight unseen.
  • A genuine "no data, no fee" guarantee. If a lab is confident, it ties its fee to results. We do: No Data, No Data Recovery Fee.
  • Care for your privacy. Your recovered files should be returned only to you, and handled confidentially — the standard we hold for sensitive government and aerospace work applies to every job.

The biggest mistake we see isn't picking the wrong lab — it's running recovery software again and again on a dying drive first. Every extra attempt on failing hardware risks overwriting the data. If a device is making noise, is hot, got wet, or won't mount, power it off and let a lab look at it.


What Our Customers Say

★★★★★  Rated 4.9 / 5 from 67 verified reviews on Trustpilot.

Brought in what I thought would be a total-loss hard drive, and these guys were super professional and knew exactly what they were talking about. I wholeheartedly recommend eProvided to anyone who has lost crucial data. — Verified Trustpilot review

Popular Questions

Is eProvided really featured in Popular Mechanics?
Yes. Founder Bruce Cullen was featured in Popular Mechanics in 2005 for eProvided's data-recovery work. We've also been covered by Reuters for our NAND flash recovery.
Can you recover data software said was unrecoverable?
Often, yes. "Unrecoverable" usually means software couldn't get past a hardware fault, not that the data is erased. We read the storage at the chip level after repairing the failure.
What does it cost?
Your evaluation is free, and our guarantee is simple: No Data, No Data Recovery Fee. If we can't recover your data, you don't pay a recovery fee. See our pricing for ranges.
Do you recover newer SSDs and phones, or just older drives?
Both. NVMe and portable SSDs, USB-C flash drives, CFexpress and microSD camera cards, and the soldered-in storage inside modern phones are the bulk of what we recover today — all at the chip level when the controller or card has failed.
How long has eProvided been doing this?
Since 1999 — over 27 years of chip-level flash and drive recovery, including work for NASA, the U.S. Department of the Navy, and the FBI. Founder Bruce Cullen is a Certified Data Recovery Specialist.

Whatever you've lost and whatever failed, the data is rarely as gone as it feels. Start a free evaluation and send your device in, or call (866) 857-5950 to talk it through with a specialist — the same expertise the press keeps writing about, put to work on your drive.