alkemyst
No Lifer
- Feb 13, 2001
- 83,769
- 19
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Do any of you interface to your clients remotely, to do all this?
you can't do it all remotely.
Do any of you interface to your clients remotely, to do all this?
Do any of you interface to your clients remotely, to do all this?
Nothing, It's useless.2. What questions do you ask the customer before going to work on their PC?
Universal Virus Sniffer (for 0-day trojans/rootkits) and Dr.Web CureIt!, Kaspersky Removal Tool for file infectors cases.3. What tools do you take along (both software and hardware tools)?
Cleaning temps, checking and removing trojans, rootkit detection, system cleanup after viruses and tuning (Disable autoruns, Disable System Restore and so on) Usually It takes about 20 mins.4. In what order, form turning the system on to job finished, do you do what you do?
Avira Antivir Free version + Comodo Personal Firewall + ERUNT (replaces useless SystemRestore)5. Do you leave any software on the customer's computer to prevent future malware attacks? If so, what?
Nothing, It's useless, they won't listen anyway.6. What [if any] advice do you leave the customer with, on how to keep their system clean?
Nice thread. Anyone have tips on getting started and advertising? I post on craigslist and nobody responds around here.
Great write up. I do computer repair as a side job. Mostly virus removal. I do house calls. And that gets me quite a bit of business. I live in a small town with even smaller rural areas all around. The fact that I go to their house is the main reason I get business. I'm always looking to improve my methods. I have had a few call backs where stuff pops up. Very annoying. I also need to be charging more!! I have been doing a flat rate for virus removal and it's $65!! One of you said something about $60/hour. Wow, I need to at least be getting a little more than my flat rate I guess!
My problem with the hourly rate is the fact that completion time of cleanup depends about 99% on how old the machine is. Some people really do wish their old P4 2 GHz single core with 512 MB RAM will perform like new, and they just don't understand that it will not unless I install for them just Windows XP sans service packs, use IE6, and MS Office 2000. Of course that would not at all be practical.
So when a machine of that caliper gets a hoax antivirus program or something of that nature, I could literally sit at their house all day and watch status bars crawl, so I usually get there, see what I'm dealing with (usually you can tell within 5 seconds of just seeing the machine what you're dealing with), and I almost always tell them I'll take it home and clean it up, and charge a flat rate as well.
It's not my career or anything so I'm usually trying to help people first and get a little side cash second. Plus when it's at my home, I'm actually in front of the computer maybe 1 hour tops .
Well if you are running things like a virus/malware scan, defrag, or disk check, you don't need to sit at the computer and watch the progress indicator for 90 minutes (on a slower computer). I start working on a different computer (or something else) then check back periodically. Even when installing the OS, you don't need to sit there and bill them for watching the progress indicator.My problem with the hourly rate is the fact that completion time of cleanup depends about 99% on how old the machine is.
Well if you are running things like a virus/malware scan, defrag, or disk check, you don't need to sit at the computer and watch the progress indicator for 90 minutes (on a slower computer). I start working on a different computer (or something else) then check back periodically. Even when installing the OS, you don't need to sit there and bill them for watching the progress indicator.
That is pretty much were I am at as well. Although I charge more.
IMHO, once a system has malware, it really isn't worth the effort to try and remove. It doesn't take much more work to back up data and reinstall the OS.
Also, is it me or does everyone that gets in this situation have an ancient XP box with only 512MB of RAM. I see this all the time.
-KeithP
Make yourself a checklist of things to do before you actually begin servicing the machine. And then a checklist of things to double-check post-service.Another thing, when you do have it at your shop. Leaving isn't always a good idea either. Sometimes things freeze or stuff. Sometimes I forget to check the screen saver and power settings. VERY ANNOYING, when the computer goes into stand-by or screen saver mode.