This program has been tested (slightly) on a Fostex FD-8. It may or may not work on hard drives recorded by that or other FDMS-3 machines, but it can easily fail. Hopefully it won't destroy your data, but it might. You've been warned. This program should be considered very beta, but it seems to work. The Windows version will not work with Windows 95, 98 or NT 4. It may work with Windows 2000 (haven't tested on that platform, though). If you are using Windows XP, though, and you are logged in with administrator privileges, then the executable below may work for you. To use it, go to a command line in a directory where you want the wave files to show up, and run "FDMS_Import.exe" followed by the name of the SCSI hard drive (in my case, that's PhysicalDrive1). The program makes some effort to verify that you've got the right disk, but it is not a rigorous check. If all goes well, the program will leave a new file in the directory named "list.txt" (creative name, huh?) which is a list of all programs on the disk, followed by their title. Pick a program number and re-run the program adding the number to the command line (e.g. "FDMS_Import.exe PhysicalDrive1 34"). The program should extract wave files associated with the indicated program. Each wave file has three numbers in its name; the first is the program number, the second the track number, and the third is a segment number. As far as I can tell, the audio of each track is composed of all of the segments for that track concantenated together.