This belongs in the Technibble "bs Hall of Fame", I've not read such a tale of incredulous garbage since Scott Rogers last signed on here.Yes, it was a Dell. Not sure of age, probably a Dimension. I've had MBR-eating viruses before on his PCs, at one point I had to replace his HDD's, literally open up the cases and replace the physical HDD, because a virus had written itself to the MBR and no amount of virus cleaning could get it off. He ultimately got rid of the machine I originally posted about in this thread. I'm not sure if he ever figured out what was wrong with it. I offered to replace the RAM in the box, but he said no, he was gonna have his repair shop fix it since they sold him the box in the first place!
Of course, the guy who used to do such a wonderful job repairing his PCs only works on corporate accounts now, and the average Joe gets stuck with the front desk techs. This guy has a revolving door of Pizza Tech-level morons running his front desk now, every time my dad goes in there there's somebody new working the desk. My dad will NOT accept the idea that V. is no longer personally working on my dad's desktop. Next time I will simply work on it myself.
I'd LOVE to build my dad a custom machine, but he doesn't have the money, my box cost some $1700 to assemble, just for the parts. And that was in November 2007. I really think now that it was either RAM or the Dell version of the MBR. In either case replacing the HDD or the RAM stick would have solved the problem. But no, my dad goes out and buys a new box.![]()
Seriously Bytebuster, you clearly have a lot of issues to deal with - being competent & confident in your work is but one of them. I've had a quick read through the many threads you've originated on technibble and nearly always you make derogatory comments about your customers. We are all working in tough times and we all have difficult customers to deal with, but we do the job they pay us for to the best of our abilities, we learn from our mistakes and we move on. If you do not learn to accept and educate yourself via your own mistakes, you will always be "the other guy".
Sometimes customers are actually right, it's only when you don't listen that they become wrong. I think your dad is actually trying to help you.
