Data recovery and disk repair questions and discussions related to old-fashioned SATA, SAS, SCSI, IDE, MFM hard drives - any type of storage device that has moving parts
March 27th, 2010, 17:37
Hello Data Recovery and Hard Drive Repair Engineers,
I wish you all the best and good luck with your effort working on the field.
My purpose of posting this article is to appreciate Engineers who work for companies and individually.
I have experience of almost six years in the data recovery and hard drive repairing work. I want to know our demand of work and how Engineer's looking their career in the future.
I also want to share some of my skills and experience with any DR and HDD Engineer's.
M Ali
March 28th, 2010, 3:54
you need to search DR companies in website and check career page hope you will find some job best of luck....
also you can contact Mr.nadir in karachi-pakistan who is more then 11 year experience in data recovery and harddisk repair he will help you..
March 28th, 2010, 4:20
He already runs his own business i dont think he needs a job .
March 28th, 2010, 4:33
Maybe you are right rameez
March 28th, 2010, 6:39
Ya I am doing my own business.. but want to know how our future will be? and how we better our future?
March 28th, 2010, 9:33
The unique way to embetter your future is GO ON and don't care about everything else. And see who does better than you and learn from the errors of who fails. PERIOD.
March 28th, 2010, 10:16
Yesterday is History
Future is Mystery
TOday is the Gift (Enjoy & Learn ).
March 28th, 2010, 16:25
I have looked into my crystal ball and SSD will overtake hard disks soon
March 28th, 2010, 16:43
Clean your crystal ball, you didn't see clearly through it. I heard this bull... ehm... thing about 5 years ago, and the number of HDDs on the market and coming in for recovery is still increasing

.
March 28th, 2010, 17:10
yeah my crystall ball sucks on SSD i agree with you BlackST...but what i see as potential "could be" threath to DR is increasing numbers in VMware VDI's
March 29th, 2010, 6:16
Personally, I do not see SSD taking over HDD for a very long time, if even at all.....
March 29th, 2010, 11:51
They have a lot of problems to work out with SSD in order for it to take over HDD completely.
Also, I wonder what people are going to say when they move to SSD and the controller fails and we give them min price tag of $1000 on their recovery.
At least with HDD you run into some simpler issues that you dont have to charge 1k+ for, but with SSD that is going to be tougher to do.
March 29th, 2010, 13:22
When you say Future is in 10 years ....
What we can see in 10 Years that the drives from 2Gb come to 2Tb, and they are still arriving to recovery.
Last week i had two cases of 3.2Gb (samsung) and 4.1Gb ( maxtor)
At the moment there are still a lot of drives in the world...
March 29th, 2010, 18:04
I think future will be our, However in the present there is some types of difficulties with our works but I recently completed a unique case.
Few days ago two captains from Pakistan Navy visited my office for the recovery of submarine hard drive it is 1.2 GB SCSI Seagate.
Only one bad sector on 300MB I successfully repaired and charge a maximum cost of my little work.
They appreciate my work it is much better compare to the money.
So I expected there is more interesting work waiting for us!
M Ali
March 30th, 2010, 2:17
10 years time solid ssd drives.
no recovery unless someone gets the data on the drives
only people that will be able to recovery will be the factory that make the units.
as that information will be kept secret.
ssd drives fail more then normal platter drives
so lots of design faults there
March 30th, 2010, 6:44
yes its true ssd drives fail more then normal platter drives..
But no one knows future maybe they will solve there fail problem in ssd drives..
March 31st, 2010, 2:49
No need to worry about the future , no one could predict whats gonna happen .
April 1st, 2010, 13:19
what will happen to data recovery as we know it when SSD hard drives start replacing motor bearing hard drives?
April 1st, 2010, 13:38
There will be a lot more "some assembly required" jobs =)
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