James
Phila,#2Consumer Comment
Sun, May 18, 2003
from a tech. this is not a complicated or expensive process unless you have pertinent data on the bad drive, and they cant access the drive to restore it. In this case they would have to recover all lost data on the bad drive, and clone(or ghost as we call it) to the new drive. At the volume of drives that Dell buys, maybe they pay 40 us dollars for a new drive.
James
Phila,#3Consumer Comment
Sun, May 18, 2003
from a tech. this is not a complicated or expensive process unless you have pertinent data on the bad drive, and they cant access the drive to restore it. In this case they would have to recover all lost data on the bad drive, and clone(or ghost as we call it) to the new drive. At the volume of drives that Dell buys, maybe they pay 40 us dollars for a new drive.
James
Phila,#4Consumer Comment
Sun, May 18, 2003
from a tech. this is not a complicated or expensive process unless you have pertinent data on the bad drive, and they cant access the drive to restore it. In this case they would have to recover all lost data on the bad drive, and clone(or ghost as we call it) to the new drive. At the volume of drives that Dell buys, maybe they pay 40 us dollars for a new drive.