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Edited on Sat Apr-29-06 02:17 PM by RoyGBiv
The thing is this. I don't look at him as a "client." He's some guy who had a problem I agreed to try to fix, and I did fix that particular problem. When I say "not a client" what I mean is that this isn't a business, which is what my initial comments were intended to convey. The one and only reason I started charging for this at all was that after building a system for someone at work and fixing another person's computer for nothing but the cost of parts, I started having every random individual in the company who knew of me ask to help them. I'm not exaggerating too much by saying I would have had to quit my job to have time to do it all. The final straw was someone who had a completely trashed system infected with, count 'em, 11 viruses, one of which was a particularly nasty bugger that took my most of a Sunday afternoon to exterminate. And when he got his system back, he was pissed, at me, and let me know he was pissed, at me, that his system didn't run faster. (It was a Pentium III ~500MHz with 128megs and a 10gig (5400rpm) hard drive trying to run XP Professional. Just wasn't a lot I could do to speed that mess up.) So, after that, I started quoting prices to people up front and detailing what I was going to do before I did it if it involved anything other than the "look at it" cost, and this cut down on the nonsense and leeches.
I know I'm skirting a fine line here, but I do make clear I am not Class A certified. I do this in my spare time. I may or may not be able to help, but I'm not filling up my living room with random people's computers and spending every spare moment on them. I enjoy fiddling with computers, but not *that* much. I enjoy helping people, but again, not *that* much.
A better question might be whether I'd tell a friend. Yes, I would. This guy isn't a friend, or even someone I want to know outside of work. The bit about him suspecting a virus problem came out during his rambling. (He goes on and on and on, and I just smile and nod.) What I told him was that I'd try to fix the shutdown issue, and I told him it was very unlikely that the problem he described was caused by a virus, or any software issue. And I said nothing more than that except that I couldn't guarantee I could fix it, but if it were a power supply, memory, or heat issue, one of which is what I suspected, I'd let him know what it would cost to fix.
After all that, what I eventually did, taking into account the advice here, was this: To address his concern about a virus, I downloaded the free version of AVG and placed an icon for it on his desktop. I told him I didn't want to leave any newly installed software on his system without letting him know first, so I just left that there to install if he wanted, and I explained how to do it, get the updates, and run a system scan. If he does, AVG will find the keylogger, and it'll be up to him to deal with it.
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