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Behind the Scenes at a Hard Drive Rescue (
Page 1 of 2 )
The folks who actually make the hard drives are probably the best ones to do the rescuing when the HDDs go bonkers.
We've all been there at one time or another—and if you haven't, you will be at
some point: Your computer seizes up, the Blue Screen of Death rears its ugly head
and your computer passes away into the night, taking all that data and
functionality with it.
We're talking about the life cycle of the typical hard drive, which can vary
between anywhere from a couple of weeks to 12 years, depending upon many factors.
I personally have a 16GB C drive inside my ancient enterprise-class Hewlett-Packard
Vectra desktop, which was a corporate standard in 2000 when I was senior editor
at DevX.com.
It still runs wonderfully well, although it's way outmoded. It does what I
need it to do, thank you, and I don't need it for videogames or for showing
movies.
(Just to make sure, though, I have Carbonite
backing up everything I do on it. Fifty bucks a year, unlimited capacity file
backup, operates in the background with no effect on my work—not a bad deal. It's
a service in the cloud, like EMC's Mozy, that is highly recommended.)
So today's story is about hard drive rescues: how someone opens up a dead
hard drive and is able to get the files and other data off it, and then put that
data back onto another drive that can be used.
I had two other old hard drives, both six to 10 years old, that contained some
valuable personal files (mostly music and photos) and were sitting on a shelf,
gathering dust. As luck would have it, Seagate Technology called me one day and
told me about the company's new Recovery Services.
Here's a short recap:
Seagate Recovery Services opened for business at 1,400 Staples and 33 Fry's Electronics
stores in North America and Hawaii
in November 2007. It is competing with the Geek Squad, which is ensconced at
Best Buy stores.
Staples fronts the Seagate services through Staples' in-store EasyTech services
staff. But Seagate people actually do the work.
Customers can walk up to the EasyTech counter and drop off any make or brand of
digital storage container—hard drives from laptops, desktops, iPods, or
external drives; RAID storage arrays; flash drives; optical drives; digital
videocams; and tape and optical media, including CDs and DVDs.
In each store, Staples staff people offer a free evaluation of the media,
determine the cost of recovery and, once approved by the customer, try to
recover the data.
"It's sort of like the relationship Geek Squad has with Best Buy,"
Jay Remley, president of Seagate Recovery Services, told eWEEK. "There
isn't a lot of investment from Staples in this new service, outside of some
training. Seagate is handling all the recovery services itself."
Service costs will vary, but most hard drive data recovery projects will cost
between about $200 and $2,000, Remley said. But you get a fresh new USB-connected
storage drive that holds your old data.
Data loss can be caused by mechanical failure of a device, contamination, fire
or water damage, human error or other factors. In most cases, the data can be
recovered by trained technicians by using a combination of software
technologies and physical reconstruction of the device, Remley said.
Remley said the services include the guarantee that if Seagate and Staples
can't recover the data, there will be no charge to the customer.
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