Doomer wrote:
Guys would you stop BSing already?
Why you need to come back to the same shit in every topic?
It is clear as day that fzabkar likes what he's doing and he believes he's doing right thing and he's not going to stop what he's doing, so just stop convincing him. And as far as I see there are happy people who liked his help. Also there are people who weren't able to get things solved by his advice, because he doesn't know everything and unlikely going to improve his knowledge by a lot in nearest future. He also mentioned several times that he's not a Data Recovery person.
If you guys are DR persons then act like ones. Suggesting removing/replacing TVS diodes is not a Data Recovery, DR is a service. Service guys do not assume that client knows how to solder or WTF the TVS diodes are or what adaptives info in flash are etc., real DR guys offer help to clients and recover their data in exchange DR guys get paid for the job.
If a person is not willing to pay for DR IT IS NOT YOUR CLIENT - deal with it and forget it, move on. If such a person want to try DIY it's his/her right. They screw up and now they want DR? - excellent - just make fair price for messed up drives and offer your service, be civilized for crying out loud!
fzabkar, stop picking on people, if you saying you are not a DR person (which you are) then stop assuming you know what DR service is. It's just unbelievable, you almost in each thread trying to cavil at every word. Some guys don't like you - deal with it you will not convince them differently
As always, I reflect on any criticism of my behaviour. However, in order to be truly objective, you need to take into account the perceptions and criticisms by newcomers who are unaware of the "dynamics" of HDD Guru. Invariably these visitors leave with a very low opinion. In fact some have likened this forum to a pack of vultures.
As for me, I received the same treatment, and I have even been abused (for daring to exceed my lowly station and presume to offer help to a "guru"), so it is your colleagues who have set the standards and who have laid down the rules of engagement. Unlike Jesus, I don't believe in turning the other cheek. I don't "pick on" people, I only react to them picking on me, and on others.
As for poehere, she has steadfastly campaigned to undermine me. I can brush off her snide "TVS Knight" ridicule, but I find her statement that someone "franked" his drive to be particularly offensive. In fact I recall how her colleagues mercilessly ridiculed a visitor who failed in a DIY attempt. As it turned out, he had done nothing to exacerbate the initial fault, nor had I. I will provide more detail in the appropriate thread.
So, in response to poehere's disparaging remark, I chose to respond in like fashion, using the same word. I have no doubt she understood my motivation. Furthermore, I find the complaints about pricing to be hyprocritical. In fact, I find it particularly offensive how certain members patronisingly and condescending advise visitors to keep adding coins to their money jars until such time as they have accumulated enough cash to pay for professional services. Perhaps these cash strapped "gurus" should have their own Ace Labs piggy banks.
As for enjoying what I do, yes I enjoy helping people and exercising my brain at the same time, but I don't enjoy conflict, unless it is to humble an arrogant antagonist. For me, posting to HDD Guru feels like going into battle, especially so now, as I have the feeling, from your latest post, that the DR community sees me as some kind of threat. In fact I have been contacted by one DR person who expressed this absurd sentiment early on. While her PM was cordial, I found the implications morally repulsive.
As for dealing with peoples' dislike for me, how do I deal with an individual who appears to hate me simply because I want to help the same people that he wants to "take under his wing"? And how do I deal with someone who abuses me for helping him?
As for my own credentials, I'm not a DR guy now, but that does not mean that I am a complete stranger to data recovery. In fact I was recovering data on Data General clones years before many of your colleagues even heard of computers. I didn't have any special tools, or special software, or any documentation other than the help that was available from the command line. Furthermore, the OS was a proprietary one. Nevertheless I worked out the structure of its FMINFO sector in a few hours, and had a dead machine booting with all data intact. On other occasions, I rebuilt the root directory after the customer had mistakenly initialised his file system. I did this by writing a 30-word, DG Nova, machine language program that scanned the drive for sectors corresponding to the second level of the tree. Each level 2 entry had a backward link to the root. I used these links to reconstruct the root by hand, byte by byte. I also worked out how to make additional free space available on non-booting volumes by disabling hidden system areas and zeroing their respective entries in the Cluster Allocation Table. On still another occasion I recovered a corrupted sector by hot-swapping two disc packs, and Halt/Continuing the CPU in between. None of this was documented. BTW, the only machine language reference I had was a single DG page with a listing of all the commands and op codes.
I apologise if the above appears self indulgent, but I want it to be clear that I'm not just a TVS jockey. I should also say that I repaired those same drives to component level, on-site, but I don't consider that to be data recovery.