Shred

Template:Wiktionary To shred an item is literally to rip or tear it into strips.


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Computers

In the context of computers, "shredding", refers to the act of deleting a file securely, so that it cannot be restored by any means.

Deleting a file will typically only mark the diskspace occupied by the file as available (for use by new files, or files growing in size), and mark the file as gone from the directory it was in, but leave the actual contents of the file on the disk. This is, for instance, how the MS-DOS tool undelete could recover recently deleted files.

Because the diskspace is marked as available, it will eventually (assuming the disk gets written to) be used by other files, replacing the contents of the deleted file. At this point, the file can no longer be recovered in software. However, it may still be possible to recover the file by more advanced, physical means, because older magnetic recordings (such as those on a hard disk) can be read using the right equipment, even with new recordings on the same disk.

The Unix command shred, and a number of similar Windows freeware and shareware programs, will repeatedly overwrite the file with other data (typically all zeros, or random garbage) a large number of times, to make such physical recovery more difficult.

Shredding depends on the assumptions that files are not moved in the file system during their lifetime, which fails if defragmentation is done, and that they are overwritten in place, which may fail on modern file systems. These can be addressed by shredding the whole partition, not only single files. Even this may fail, since hard disk controller may mark sectors as bad and these may contain data but are not visible to the operating system.

If one wants to be absolutely sure that the file is not recoverable by any means, the best approach is to incinerate the drive, or otherwise raise the platters above their Curie point.

As an alternative, the file can be stored using strong encryption at all times, in which case there won't be any useful data to recover, assuming the encryption key is secure.

Music

In the context of an electric guitar, "shredding" refers to a virtuosic, highly technical style of playing the instrument, as exemplified by the virtuosos of the eighties such asJason Becker, Marty Friedmann, Shawn Lane, Steve Vai or Yngwie J. Malmsteen

The style of shred guitar is strongly founded in technique and theory. Many shred gutiarists are extremely well versed in music theory and classical music. Much time is devoted to the development of technique through numerous exercises. A key practice tool is the metronome. Many virtuosic techniques displayed by "shredders" include sweep picking, tapping, legato, as well as a combination of the aforementioned techniques.

Although shred is not as prominent today as in the 80's- highly technical guitar playing can still be found in many genres. Progressive metal contains many guitar virtuosos. John Petrucci, guitarist for Dream Theater, exemplifies the "prog metal" guitarist . He attended Berklee School of Music before taking off with Dream Theater.

Other sources of technical gutiar playing can be found in many metal bands. Children of Bodom's Alexi Laiho is an example of another technical guitarist.

Skiing

In the context of skiing and snowboarding, "shredding" is slang for moving with speed and style.

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