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San Diego PC Help fully services the computer service support needs of Mission Bay Park area offices and homes. We can visit your home or office to troubleshoot and pc, mac, laptop, network, server, VPN, or other issues. Or you can drop off your computer at our store, which is only 20 minutes from most Mission Bay Park locations! Benefits - What Makes Us Better: KNOWLEDGE. Our veteran support pros have years of proven experience and a near-perfect customer satisfaction rating. NO GEEKS. Many technicians are notoriously hard to work with. Our friendly computer service people speak with simplicity and clarity. PRICE. Our in-store flat rates are half that of the competition. Drop off your computer and get a free complete diagnosis with any service. Click here for more reasons...
From a single home user to an office network we can fix computer problems on site, offer virus removal & data recovery or provide computer desktop support. We also offer:
 - Mission Bay Park Home Computer Installation
- Mission Bay Park Home Computer Tutor
- Mission Bay Park Network Installation
- Mission Bay Park Computer Training
- Proven PC troubleshooting (desktop, laptop, notebook, workstation, tablet)
- Virus, spyware, trojan horse and malware cleanup and removal
- Wireless network and broadband internet connection installation, support
- Hard drive repair and hard drive data recovery and backup
- Apple Macintosh support (powerbook, macbook, mac pro, imac, G3, G4, G5)
- Server upgrades/repair, domain controller, active directory, network design
- Security camera, IP cam, DVR, alarm, firewall installation
San Diego PC Help frequently offers significant discounts on services and first time customer appreciation rewards for Mission Bay Park businesses and residents. We also offer free estimates for your specific problem. Please explore our Mission Bay Park computer support site and contact us if we can serve your Mission Bay Park computer repair, computer sales, computer troubleshooting and computer support needs.We repair Compaq, Dell, Gateway, E-Machines, IBM, HP, Sony, others. We offer faster turnaround than service centers. San Diego PC Help serves homes and businesses in Mission Bay Park for software training, security, backup, firewall and other services.We also offer preventative maintenance contracts to keep your office running smoothly. We also offer a popular web hosting, email and online data backup service for San Diegans at uspchelp.net We develop and support your desktops, servers, network, disk and security cameras for a fraction of the cost you are currently paying. See for yourself. San Diego pc repair has never been easier or more affordable.
History Mission Bay Park was developed from the 1940’s through the 1960’s using a tidal marsh named “False Bay” by Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo in 1542. The San Diego River had historically shifted its terminus from San Diego Bay to the south, to “False Bay” to the north, until 1852 when the United States Army constructed the first a dike along the south side of the river to prevent it from shifting back to San Diego Bay. This made “False Bay” an estuaries outlet for San Diego River drainage. Unfortunately the dike failed shortly after its construction was finished, but paved the way for the current San Diego River flood control channel. During the late 1800’s some recreational development began in “False Bay” including the building of hunting and fishing facilities. These facilities were destroyed by flooding that took place years later. In 1944, a Chamber of Commerce committee recommended development of Mission Bay into a tourist and recreational center to help diversify the City’s economy, which was largely military. In the late 1940’s, dredging and filling operations began converting the marsh into the jewel that is today Mission Bay Park. Twenty-five millions cubic yards of sand and silt were dredged to create the land forms of the park which now is almost entirely man-made. Today, the San Diego River is constrained on both the north and the south by levees (San Diego River Flood Control Channel), and it no longer drains to the ocean through Mission Bay other than a weir located at the entrance to Mission Bay. |