Wow, I did not get any emails that there was a reply since I last posted, and I did not check until today. So here is a reply to a few things said.
As for adding the features of hddsupertool into hddsuperclone, that is already on my to-do list. But what is not on my list is to add more vendor specific features. That would be very difficult considering that I don't know the commands needed, and it gets very complicated very quickly. I think that is best left to the others that are fighting to produce their software firmware fix tools.
As for price, we will see. Part of the problem is that everyone wants Windows software, and this is Linux only. Being able to do the soft resets (and hard resets with SATA) is one of the features. The driver feature is even more interesting, where the active recovery can be presented as a generic block device to the system. That allows the possibility of data extraction without cloning the whole drive. Right now those are the main advantages, but there are other little things I am hoping to add.
As for adding the features of hddsupertool into hddsuperclone, that is already on my to-do list. But what is not on my list is to add more vendor specific features. That would be very difficult considering that I don't know the commands needed, and it gets very complicated very quickly. I think that is best left to the others that are fighting to produce their software firmware fix tools.
As for price, we will see. Part of the problem is that everyone wants Windows software, and this is Linux only. Being able to do the soft resets (and hard resets with SATA) is one of the features. The driver feature is even more interesting, where the active recovery can be presented as a generic block device to the system. That allows the possibility of data extraction without cloning the whole drive. Right now those are the main advantages, but there are other little things I am hoping to add.