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Repair Teams Try to Calm 'Computer Rage'

Instead, Gould, who lives in Herndon, ran a search on Google and found Erik Bursch, a computer-repair consultant who works in the Tysons Corner area.

Bursch said he has made several hundred house calls over the past few years and that he is often welcomed as a conquering hero. He said he has found more and more people willing to pay the $60 to $70 an hour he charges.


Repairman Erik Bursch, right, helps Irving A. Marsland of Arlington get his computer working properly. Bursch's time costs $60 to $70 an hour.
Repairman Erik Bursch, right, helps Irving A. Marsland of Arlington get his computer working properly. Bursch's time costs $60 to $70 an hour. (By Susan Biddle -- The Washington Post)

The peaceful, park-like setting of the DriveSavers compound in a San Francisco suburb belies the frenzy inside.

The company's labs operate like a hospital emergency room.

Chessen, 31, and the other 12 customer service representatives do triage. The challenge is to recognize which of the five stages of grief -- denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance -- a given customer is in, and respond accordingly.

One recent afternoon, a man whose small business had burned down was telling Chessen how his insurance company was still inspecting the place so he could not even go in to see the carpets or to fetch his computer -- on which he had a lot of important documents. "I was thinking, Why is he yelling at me?" Chessen said later.

In another part of the building, delivery people rush in and out with oddly shaped cartons containing precious cargo. The contents of the boxes, hard drives and other data storage devices, are carefully taken to a clean room where they are dissected by technicians in white jumpsuits and blue gloves and then "cloned." The copies are sent upstairs to data specialists who try to retrieve and reconstruct what people are looking for.

Sometimes the information is important only to the person it belongs to -- pictures of one's firstborn, musical compositions, résumés, old e-mail, business plans, love letters. For others, it is something more: scripts for 12 then-unaired episodes of "The Simpsons"; research data for a cancer scientist at a major East Coast university.

The work is not cheap -- the bill is usually $500 to $2,000 -- but for many the information is priceless. In addition to paying the company's fees, some customers have sent wine and roses to show their gratitude.

David K. Schoenkin, executive director and asset management consultant at Oppenheimer & Co., recently lost his computer, Palm Pilot and cell phone when he dropped his shoulder bag in a Manhattan street and an 18-wheeler ran over it. He said the crunch of the truck going over his equipment was "horrible, deafening" as he thought about losing his journals from five years of travel to Kenya, Morocco, Chile and Laos and digital pictures of the paintings he created and sold years ago when he was an art student.

"You have to understand how devastating this was. Every single piece of electronic detail in my life was lost," he said.

DriveSavers managed to recover everything.

Not everyone is so fortunate. Ed Sit, the no-nonsense 49-year-old who is the clean-room manager, has the difficult job of giving people bad news. Some customers politely thank him for trying, Sit said. Others want to cast blame. They think that if they talk to his boss or if they pay more money they can get a different result. Sit said he thinks to himself: "I'm sorry -- but if your relative is dead in a hospital, even millions and millions of dollars are just not going to bring him back."

The loss of a computer, cell phone or other gadget can be so jolting that it is fueling the rise of what some psychologists call "computer rage." The phenomenon is transforming the nature of technology service, an industry long infamous for being impersonal.

The loss of a computer, cell phone or other gadget can be so jolting that it is fueling the rise of what some psychologists call "computer rage." The phenomenon is transforming the nature of technology service, an industry long infamous for being impersonal.


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