AV recommendations?
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
http://www.eset.com/[^] I have used ESET's NOD32 for many years without any problems. jhaga
How to earn 3000€/month online.
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
Nothing. Seriously. Years ago, one of my kids infected an old system with a benign trojan that arrived via a pokemon site that someone had hijacked. Another infected both my home systems using a music site. Once I educated everyone to NOT click OK on any request to install anything without my OK, we've been fine. Now, without that crap I actually have more stable systems. (Incidentally, it turns out that McAfee and CA EZ AntiVirus wouldn't have caught them. The online Symantec and Kaspersky scanners did, as did installing AntiVir and AVG.)
Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
-
ESET 4 sure - it has the credentials consistently over time. http://www.nod32.com.au[^]
-
I've used Avast! for the past year or so - it seems quite good and is free.
-
I've used Avast! for the past year or so - it seems quite good and is free.
-
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
If you want to pay £30 then I recommend http://www.bitdefender.com/[^], this contains all the tools I need with a small footprint. If you want a half decent free package I would recommend http://www.comodo.com/[^], the av and firewall are pretty good, the antispyware is not so good.
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
AntiVir finds all the viruses that Symantec etc miss. If I ever suspect a pc is infected then I remove the resident av and install AntiVir which finds and removes the infections. I also use Comodo firewall.
The tragedy of your times my friends is that you may get exactly what you want!
-
I recommend AVG however, if you don't use a dual core system, I recommend Avast. For some reason installing Avast made my other processor stop working so now I use AVG exclusively. Also online scanners that use about 100 AV scanners, if you use them about twice a year you'll really know if Your AV is any good.
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
This might be of interest... http://www.av-comparatives.org/[^]
-
Experience? Trash, all of them, on the scale of fully 'managed and safe' proportions. Solution: find and buy a cheap DEC Alpha :), or run Windows in a VM without net access (lol).
Funny might it seem, but.. I run Windows in VM without net access. Well... most of the time :)
A buffalo soldier, a dread-like rasta !
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
We use AVG and Zone Alarm at home, and haven't had any problems.
-
I recommend AVG however, if you don't use a dual core system, I recommend Avast. For some reason installing Avast made my other processor stop working so now I use AVG exclusively. Also online scanners that use about 100 AV scanners, if you use them about twice a year you'll really know if Your AV is any good.
Yeah.
Jwalant Natvarlal SonejiBE IT, India
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
Comodo Firewall. Spare a bit of time helping it learn what to allow, but as far as safety it's worth the time. I think AV is outdated personally and as long as I don't allow untrusted apps to execute on my system, am safe as I need to be. Hope it helps.
-
Dare I say it, my laptop's NAV *ugh* subscription is about to run out and I'm looking for something that requires less then 80% of the system resources to run in it's place. What's anyone's experience with other AV and internet security apps? Thanks.
I'm largely language agnostic
After a while they all bug me :doh:
The biggest viruses are the anti-virus programs !!! If you still have an antivirus on your computer, deinstall it quickly before it harms you more !!! Since 1990, I have almost never ran any antivirus program on my PCs, whether at work as a regular employee in several big or small companies or at home (never ever had one at home, where no administrator would force me to install and run one, contrary to some work places). And I can say that I never got caugth by a virus, to the contrary of several people I know, who had anti-virus software installed (for which they paid most of the time), and got infected, because they did not follow some simple rules, thinking they where protected. If you are on this forum reading this post, your are most probably a computer professional, meaning you know what an e-mail attached-document, a firewall or a router is. Keep the following simple rules : - Just dont do anything stupid like double-clicking an e-mail attachment that you do not expect, especially from someone you dont know, or, while using IE, clicking on a link in a strange email pointing to an strange web page. If you use Opera, Firefox or any alternate browser, your are less at risk (but still). - Never start a programm (an exe) you do not trust or do not know the origin. - Never open an MS Office document or PDF you do not know. - Use Foxit reader (x 10 faster) instead of Adobe-Acrobat. - If you can afford it, use Opera instead of IE + Outlook. Opera is a free browser, news reader, e-mail client, news-feeds, etc. that has it all and fast. - If you use Outlook, deactivate the e-mail preview pane (as some virus used to autorun through the outlook-email-preview-pane !). I am not sure this is still necessary, but it was at some point. An alternative is to use Opera mail client or Thunderbird, for example. - Be sure you are behind a firewall (properly configured...). If you are behind a router, the hardware router firewall will do the job (if properly configured...), meaning you can (should!) totally deactivate the windows firewall. - Be sure to enable automatic windows-updates to protect you against future threads. - Disable the Bios boot on floppy disk, CD, DVD and USB drives as this is totally useless nowadays. This is all very easy to do and worked for me for more than 15 years. Keep in mind that even the best antivirus program is not a 100% protection, as it will know nothing about new viruses. An antivirus program may give you some hints / advices / alerts about new threa
-
The biggest viruses are the anti-virus programs !!! If you still have an antivirus on your computer, deinstall it quickly before it harms you more !!! Since 1990, I have almost never ran any antivirus program on my PCs, whether at work as a regular employee in several big or small companies or at home (never ever had one at home, where no administrator would force me to install and run one, contrary to some work places). And I can say that I never got caugth by a virus, to the contrary of several people I know, who had anti-virus software installed (for which they paid most of the time), and got infected, because they did not follow some simple rules, thinking they where protected. If you are on this forum reading this post, your are most probably a computer professional, meaning you know what an e-mail attached-document, a firewall or a router is. Keep the following simple rules : - Just dont do anything stupid like double-clicking an e-mail attachment that you do not expect, especially from someone you dont know, or, while using IE, clicking on a link in a strange email pointing to an strange web page. If you use Opera, Firefox or any alternate browser, your are less at risk (but still). - Never start a programm (an exe) you do not trust or do not know the origin. - Never open an MS Office document or PDF you do not know. - Use Foxit reader (x 10 faster) instead of Adobe-Acrobat. - If you can afford it, use Opera instead of IE + Outlook. Opera is a free browser, news reader, e-mail client, news-feeds, etc. that has it all and fast. - If you use Outlook, deactivate the e-mail preview pane (as some virus used to autorun through the outlook-email-preview-pane !). I am not sure this is still necessary, but it was at some point. An alternative is to use Opera mail client or Thunderbird, for example. - Be sure you are behind a firewall (properly configured...). If you are behind a router, the hardware router firewall will do the job (if properly configured...), meaning you can (should!) totally deactivate the windows firewall. - Be sure to enable automatic windows-updates to protect you against future threads. - Disable the Bios boot on floppy disk, CD, DVD and USB drives as this is totally useless nowadays. This is all very easy to do and worked for me for more than 15 years. Keep in mind that even the best antivirus program is not a 100% protection, as it will know nothing about new viruses. An antivirus program may give you some hints / advices / alerts about new threa
BULLSHIT! I've had my AV stop 2 or 3 attempted browser hijacks (in opera) while surfing normal sites that had been hacked to spread viruses.
You know, every time I tried to win a bar-bet about being able to count to 1000 using my fingers I always get punched out when I reach 4.... -- El Corazon