A virus like the one rubiks is describing actually resulted in the destruction of my hard drive in 2005, leaving me without a personal computer for one and a half years before I could afford to buy another. So my heart goes out to him and to the OP. This can happen even to the most prepared: I had Norton 360 spyware and the virus still made it past the security protocols. (Norton issued a security update less than 48 hours after my computer was infected, but it was small consolation to me: the patch only offered protection against first-time infection. It did not help to remove it from infected systems.)
As for how a virus could destroy a hard drive and take away a man's computer ... well, read on ...
[hide]In my case, the virus was just as Rubiks described, but I was not able to remove it without reformatting my hard drive. Reformatting my hard drive, in turn, put too much strain on the drive and, one week later, it died. Gone. Kaput. This happened to be on a laptop whose case screws were all stripped, i.e. could not be unscrewed with a screwdriver, i.e. I was not able to dismantle the case without physically destroying it. And a laptop with no case is no laptop at all. In other words -- I'd just lost my one and only computer. And it'd be another year and a half before I could afford to buy a new one.[/hide]