SD card recovery software for recovering deleted or lost pictures and videos from Samsung Galaxy S5 SD (Secure Digital) card after format or damage. 

Recover data from SD card : the recovery of a storage card used in digital camera is including: accidentally or unintentionally deletion, it is much easier to recover the data while there is no physical damage on your SD card or you didn't take any more picture again after you realize your data has been lost. 

Using the Secure Digital card users often encounter some trouble, and sometimes both in speed sd card, computer or external device, they can not read the data files in sd card, this time need to think carefully to see if in the end are those aspects of a problem, Secure Digital flash card data lost reasons including: 

SD memory card chip is not clean - Treatment: Use cotton sheets points apply to alcohol or water gently until the water dry and then reinsert 

SD flash card infected with virus - the computer card, or other low-end storage (such as cameras, etc.) on the format, such as in computer format, should be taken to FAT format, not FAT32 format. 

Non-normal format Secure Digital card - Treatment: As the mobile phone and computer format as formatted by using the method described in the definition of a computer file format and then re-formatted just fine. If readers try on the computer, cell about Secure Digital cards, please be sure to check whether the format of the card is FAT, FAT32 E680 because it is not recognize the. 

Samsung's Galaxy S5 excels at everything that matters -- Android 4.4 KitKat OS; a bright, beautiful display; blistering quad-core processor; and an excellent camera experience. In addition, Samsung's efforts to streamline its own custom interface and reduce pre-installed bloatware pay off. 

The GS5 is only a fraction larger than the Galaxy S4: it measures 5.59 inches tall by 2.85 inches wide by 0.32-inch deep, or 142mm by 72.5mm by 8.1mm; and it weighs 5.1 ounces, or 145 grams. Even though the extra hardware makes it a little taller and heavier than the Galaxy S4, I had no problem carting it around. Even outside my ridiculously heavy purse, which is usually home to at least two phones and a jumble of weighty items, the S5 stayed put in the back pocket of my skinny jeans, and stayed wedged in my hand during several-mile jogs. (Full disclosure: I may have also had a death grip on it.)