My Reimage Experience
After hearing about Reimage on Technibble & the Force Field Podcast I was intrigued enough to give it a try. Like most other technicians I had some reservations about how it is licensed and the whole concept of an “automated repair” but figured it couldn’t hurt to give it a try. Today I finally had the opportunity put Reimage to the test. I had a computer in my shop that was a teenage girl’s computer that was “looping” at boot up. The computer would get to the XP Logo with the progress bar and then restart. It would do this over and over in a continuous loop. To me this seemed like a good candidate for my reimage test. Not knowing about the free three day trial through Technibble I signed up for the $79 – 3 Repairs package. At $26.33 per use that is really pricey but I just wasn’t ready to commit to the $199 – 20 Repairs package and again I didn’t know about the free trial. Bummer.
Since this computer wouldn’t boot I needed to download the Boot CD creator from their site. Once downloaded, the Boot CD Creator informed me that I needed a XP CD so it could create the Boot CD. So I got an XP CD put it in the drive and was expecting it to take about 15 minutes to create the Bootable CD, unfortunately it took well over an hour to create the bootable ISO. I burned the ISO to a CD and was finally ready to give reimage a try. I turned on the broken computer, popped the CD in the drive and it actually booted into what looked like a Bart’s PE environment. Just as I started to think I was in the clear I got two error messages on the screen:
1. Error - Unable to start “DHCP Client” service.
2. XPELogon - Main shell died with code 0x1 before starting (GetLastError()==1440), there are some problems….I’ll start command prompt now.
At this point it was about 6PM and I decided to call it a day. I was definitely disappointed with the service and figured I would give a call to tech support the next day when I had some time. The next day I browsed over to the site and looked for the tech support number but wasn’t able to find one. I quickly realized that they don’t offer phone support, or if they do I couldn’t find it. So I emailed support with my problem and they replied back in less than 10 minutes. They informed me that my boot CD was corrupt and gave me a link to download a Boot CD from their site. So I downloaded it and burned it to a CD and tried the whole process over again.
This time the computer actually booted up from the CD without issue and was able to connect to the Reimage site where I began the fixing process. Right as it started I got yet another error message. This time the error was coming from reimage site not the OS. It informed me that the computer could not be fixed because it had insufficient RAM and virtual RAM. This computer has 512MB of ram, a little low by today’s standards but reimage should definitely not give an error. I decided to give it another try by clicking the “Fix” button again, this time it got the same error. I tried it one last time, and got a message stating that the computer had a low amount of RAM available but reimage could still fix the problems but it would take longer than normal. Now apparently I used the new version because I was told exactly what it was going to fix and I had the option of fixing or not fixing what I wanted. I reviewed everything that it was going to fix and it all looked fine to me. And just 32 minutes later I had a message on the screen letting me know that the computer has been fixed and is ready to be rebooted.
So it is finally the moment of truth….Will the computer that was previously “looping” actually boot into Windows? YES, it booted into Windows and I was presented with a window that informed me what services it disabled and I had the option of re-enabling these services. Since all of the services it disabled were for my remote software, Bomgar (Similar to WebEx) I re-enabled them. It rebooted one last time and the computer now appeared to be working normally. I now ran the typical CCleaner, SmitFraudFix, AVG Scan and Windows Update. The computer is now running perfectly.
Overall my first experience with Reimage was mediocre at best, a solid C. I see a lot of potential in products like Reimage and think we will be seeing more “automated repair” software in the future. I would be more open to Reimage if it were licensed traditionally as opposed to the SaaS model. In order for me to continue to use Reimage I will need to know that it is going to save my business money. If I am paying $10 per license I need to know that Reimage will save my business at least $10 dollars in labor cost while still maintaining the same quality that my customers expect. I will definitely keep Reimage in my toolbox and give it a try again when another “good candidate” comes along.