On Tue, May 4, 2010 at 3:05 AM, John Foust <jfoust at threedee.com> wrote:
 In mid-March on this thread, I described an old IBM Deskstar
 20 gig from a Mac G3 that died. ?I sent the drive to 
Gillware.com
 for recovery.
 My experience? ?In general, I'm happy that the data was recovered.
 I'm unhappy in the sense that I'm out $800 without any explanation,
 or new professional connection to a service I might need to use in
 the future, and for the yucky feeling of dealing with clueless
 and misleading customer service people. ?I get this feeling that
 it's my expectations that may not be reasonable, and that I was
 dealing with an industry that's known for bait-and-switch and
 rough treatment.
 My initial diagnosis was correct, apparently. ?This looked like
 and sounded like an NVRAM failure (as described in my initial
 post about this.) ?I told them this in my service request on
 their web site. ?However, the customer service person at intake
 did not follow through on my requests to see if I'd receive a
 discount as an affiliate (I'd signed up a year before, they
 give a finder's fee of 15% or so), if the charge would be
 different if it was just an NVRAM problem, or if I could pay
 less to get a pure block recovery and not a file-level recovery.
 I had to send them a new drive to hold the recovered data along
 with the old drive.
 Apparently asking for a block-copy isn't their practice, as it
 can lead to situations where the customer is given a bunch of
 data that doesn't contain what they wanted and doesn't want to
 pay for it post-facto.
 First they told me in an email and a phone call that I would be
 subject to up to $300 in addtiional clean room fees, which I had
 to approve before they'd proceed, which I did. ?Later I was told
 the recovery would cost $800, which is more than the $700 minimum
 for Mac data. ?(And twice the price than if the drive was PC.)
 When they've recovered your files, they send you a viewer that
 shows you the names of the files they've recovered. ?When they
 called to say it was ready, I asked to speak to a technician
 before they charged my card. ?My request was ignored. ?I received
 my new drive with no explanation. ?I had to make a specific request
 to have my old drive returned. ?Indeed, the NVRAM was resoldered.
 Apparently asking for an explanation of what was wrong with
 your drive is not within their practice, either, nor are they
 willing to tell what they did to fix it even in vague terms.
 After emailing some complaints, I received a voice mail message
 from the founder, Brian Gill, and later I spoke directly to the
 engineer who actually worked on my drive. ?Apparently a great
 number of their customers are (as they put it) "amateur data
 recovery personnel that would love to know how we recover data" and
 "if we inform people what we do and how we do it we would not get
 any future cases."
 The engineer said the case record had no details about what
 was actually wrong with my drive or how they repaired it. ?They
 can't explain what they did for $700, nor for the $100 that brought
 it to $800. ?I'm baffled by this.
 The founder's voice mail said I wasn't charged clean room fees.
 The engineer said if their sticker was on the drive then they
 had to open it. ?He also suggested that they'd waived the clean
 room fees because I was paying Mac prices, or that the parts it
 needed were so cheap that they didn't want to charge me. ?The
 drive seals are as dusty as they were when I sent them the drive.
 Don't you clean a drive before you put it in the clean room?
 I wanted to find a data recovery service that could give me
 good service and a professional level of interaction when it
 came to explaining what happened to the drive and presumably
 about the chances for recovery. ?I didn't get that. ?I like
 paying for the services I get. ?I don't like the feeling that
 I'm paying bend-over prices and that I should thank them for
 telling me nothing. 
Well, I know nothing about the price of professional data recover in
the USA, but having sent several backupless consultancy clients of
mine down that road before now, I can tell you than in the UK, you
could add a zero onto those prices.
As in, ?5000-?8000 for a typical job. That's broadly $7500-$12000.
And yes, I've known people pay it. ?3000 was cheap, and the only
quotes I've ever had of under ?1000 were for relatively-speaking
trivial jobs where serious work was not needed.
The company's customer service sounds bad, but by European standards,
the price is very very good.
The last time I used it, the first pass, where they look at the drive
and tell you if /maybe/ they can recover some stuff and give you a
directory listing of what, that alone was ?350 or so, plus courier
fees etc., coming to ?400 in total. That was without any actual work,
and it cost about what you paid for the whole job.
I don't know if that makes you feel any better at all...
--
Liam Proven ? Profile: 
http://www.linkedin.com/in/liamproven
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk ? GMail/GoogleTalk/Orkut: lproven at 
gmail.com
Tel: +44 20-8685-0498 ? Cell: +44 7939-087884 ? Fax: + 44 870-9151419
AOL/AIM/iChat/Yahoo/Skype: liamproven ? LiveJournal/Twitter: lproven
MSN: lproven at 
hotmail.com ? ICQ: 73187508