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October 19, 2010

Computer Technician: customer won’t come pay his bill and get his computer, can I sell it to recover my costs?

Filed under: Windows Disaster Recovery — wayne @ 12:30 am

I worked very hard on the customer’s computer. The computer was infested with viruses and malware, hardrive partition errors, had a pirated Windows OS license on it (one of the reasons it was inoperable: he tried to run Vista SP1 and they caught him on a pirated license), and it was choked with pet dander and cigarette residue.

I completely cleaned the insides of the PC (including all fans, vents, heatsync), cleaned and applied new heatsync compound to his processor (it was overheating). I then spent at least 13 hours recovering all of his 300+gigs personal folders (family computer, used by 6 users), reinstalling a VALID OS and license, formatted his drives, recovered his software licenses (done prior to format) & downloaded his software (he had no cd’s for the applications) and reinstalled all of it, plus antivirus and anti-malware software, restores all of his personal folders, and imaged his drive as a clean backup for future disaster recovery.

I only charged and billed him 3 hours at $30/hour ($90), which is a heck of a deal. I charged that low because I was broke and he promised to bring me more business.

So I called and left him a voice mail message, emailed him, and cell texted him, everyday since the computer was ready for him to pick up. He hasn’t responded. Then after 2 weeks, I texted him and explained to him that I am broke and I’m about to put an ad on Craigslist to sell his PC for the un-paid debt, and NOW he texts me and gives me some sob story, but he has yet to pay me. Basically just giving me a run-around.

Now my question is this: what are the Texas laws regarding this situation, and how long must I wait before it’s legal for me to basically auction the property to recover this debt?

Another detail is that there was never a contract. I never gave him (nor was I asked for) a receipt when the customer left his PC and asked me to fix it. However, he was fully aware of the magnitude of the needed repairs, and fully aware of my hourly rate.

I welcome any answer that can be backed up with a valid source, and which considers relevant local laws and regulations. Thanks!
Ed Atun: “You’re right, it is the State Laws (Texas) that decide these matters. You, admittedly, are ignorant of these. Furthermore, since you haven’t bothered to cite a source to back up your claim, and therefore it must be assumed that your comments are arbitrary and inconsequential.”

You can not make a contract where none exists. If you had a contract that gave him 120 days to pay or you could sell, you would be covered. Which means that you need to institute that policy today.

Since you did not, you would have to go to Small Claims Court to get satisfaction. The next question is how long you have to store his item before it is considered abandoned. That would be part of your state’s laws. Probably 3-6 months.

October 16, 2010

How should I go about becoming a system admin?

Filed under: Windows Disaster Recovery — wayne @ 10:22 am

I would like to become a System Admin, however, I’m not really sure how to go about it.

I am thinking about getting an Associates in Computer Information Systems (security concentration). Then possibly getting a bachelors in something else or getting certs. I’m really not sure what the best way to go about this is and I really don’t want to make the wrong decisions.

The course outline for that degree is,

1. Programming: Logic, Design and Implementation
2. Networking Technologies
3. Operating Systems
4. Introduction to UNIX/Linux and Shell Programming
5. Windows Server Administration 1
6. Windows Server Administration 2
7. Hardware Fundamentals
8. Network Security
9. Firewall Security
10. Operating Systems Security
11. Information Security and Disaster Recovery
12. Security Seminar

What do you guys think of that course? Do you have and suggestions for becoming a System Administrator? Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks for your time,
res

those classes look to me like they are very across the board. probably to give you a general knowledge. the key is once you have that knowledge what you do with it. You will not become an Admin straight out of school. that is something you will have to work up to. I have seen admins with degrees in business or literature, but a butt load of experience in computers.

October 13, 2010

Computer Disaster Help?

Filed under: Windows Disaster Recovery — wayne @ 9:00 pm

ok so my hp windows xp (computer) got a virus, so i thought i knew what i was doing and pressed F10 for recovery. i did the recovery but i had no idea it would erase all of our files and uninstall microsoft word. im in deep trouble and i need all the help i can get. please tell me how to get our files back and put my computer back to how it was before it went into recovery mode.

It is quite likely that you actually deleted all of your files.

You can find more information here: http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/fastFaqLiteDocument?lc=en&cc=us&dlc=en&product=18703&docname=c00608578

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