Getting re-acclimated to the US after being in Ukraine / Germany for 2 weeks has been tough... really tough. For lots of reasons. Besides the post-mission trip letdown that you normally would experience, I have been having a ridiculous amount of IT problems... expensive IT problems.
First, my iPod was lost in Ukraine. If I replace it with a new one that is capable of holding all my 35GB of music (I'd need the 120GB classic iPod), that will be $250. Haven't spent that yet... It's definitely not a necessity.
Then, when I got home, I had successfully transferred 2058 pictures (all from the 13-day Ukraine / Germany trip) from my camera's SD card to my external harddrive. I started uploading the pics to my Picasa site. You can only upload 500 pics per album. I got one album up and I was nearly 300 pics into my second album when my external harddrive crashed. My computer will not recognize the drive. Now the sad (and stupid) thing is that all my pics from 2005 through today are in jeopardy. My laptop's harddrive is small, so I bought the 350GB external harddrive for $99 in Feb 2007. The docs and music that are on the external HD are copies of what is on the laptop, so that's fine. But the pics and vids and 6GB of overflow music (techno songs that are long so they are too big for my laptop) are not replaceable.
So the recovery effort begins.
I gave my SD card to my friend and coworker who was able to successfully recover 95% of the Ukraine pics straight from the card! (I had deleted them after copying them to my HD.) He burned those onto DVD for me, so now I can go through those pictures and start putting them online to share with you!
Then on Friday I took my external HD to a computer store in League City. They work remotely with a lab in Denver. The store manager told me that if they could retrieve the data in-house, it would be no more than $130. But if not, they would hook it up remotely to the Denver-based lab and it would be at least $500.
Yesterday, Denver called me to say that they could see my folders and files. That was the sign that the shop couldn't do it in-house.
Today the Denver lab told me it would be $625 to recover the data. It doesn't matter if I retrieve some or all... that's just how much it's going to cost. There are 96GB of data on there.
In addition, I had to buy a new external HD for them to put the recovered data onto. That was another $250. I bought one with 1TB (1000GB) of RAID 1 mirrored data and auto backup software to prevent this from happening again.
Once my new external HD comes in, I can take it to the computer shop and then the Denver lab will remotely download all the recovered data to it. For a mere $625, I can once again have my precious pictures. ;)
I'm kinda debating if I really want those pictures and files... But, there are 20,629 irreplaceable pictures on that harddrive. I guess it's worth it... it's just hard when you have to pay for a preventable mistake.
This has been an expensive summer:
$600 replace stolen camera earlier this year (preventable)
$625 recover lost data (preventable)
$250 replace lost iPod (preventable)
$250 replace ruined harddrive (preventable)
Am I careless? Not really, just had some bad luck lately. At least I have a job...
1 comment:
Whoa !! That's a lot of stuff to happen in such a short time. You just made a whole lot of people feel pretty lucky that it hasn't happened to THEM.
I really feel for you, since I lost all but a few of my 2005 photos a couple of years ago. Failure to backup. I have been contacted several times about purchasing or using some of those photos (two by Getty Images), and I have to say regretfully that I don't have them.
They say that in the digital world, nothing really exists unless it exists in three places, one of them being off-site.
You might look around to see if there is another company that's willing to do the work for less. That's a TON of money.
Glad you have a backup with two mirrored drives. That's great.
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