Next Antivirius Software

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  • catta12
    Established Member
    • Jan 2008
    • 250
    • Reno, NV
    • BTS20R

    #1

    Next Antivirius Software

    I have been using Kaspersky Internet Security 7.0 for the last year with good results. The spam blocking and parental controls were features I turned off, but everything else worked fine. I have read reviews that KIS 2009 took a wrong turn so am second guessing staying with KIS.

    So, my question is: What do you suggest? Any experience with KIS 2009? Has Norton de-bloated any?

    I might just put AVG back on for a while.

    And I should say that I am running Vista. And no I am not switching the OS right now.
    If you can read this you assembled wrong.


    Alan
  • jonmulzer
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2007
    • 946
    • Indianapolis, IN

    #2
    Norton, McAfee, Kaspersky, they are all crap. The only thing I have ever recommended was AVG. Honestly, I would not use anything at all on my personal PC if it were not that AVG does not slow anything down for me and keeps a very small RAM footprint. The three I first mentioned are like Vista. They can take an otherwise competent computer and reduce it to a crawl. The absolute best AV program is good old common sense. After that, it is AVG all the way.
    "A fine beer may be judged with just one sip, but it is better to be thoroughly sure"

    Comment

    • maxparot
      Veteran Member
      • Jan 2004
      • 1421
      • Mesa, Arizona, USA.
      • BT3100 w/ wide table kit

      #3
      I've used Norton, McAfee and AVG the only one that ever let a virus through was AVG presently I favor Avast Home. Seems to be a modest footprint on my systems resources and in 6 months of use it hasn't let me down. It has caught some malware and I get regular updates.
      Opinions are like gas;
      I don't mind hearing it, but keep it to yourself if it stinks.

      Comment

      • crokett
        The Full Monte
        • Jan 2003
        • 10627
        • Mebane, NC, USA.
        • Ryobi BT3000

        #4
        If you talk to enough people you will find that all the anti-virus programs have let something through at one time or another. The best protection is common sense. For years I didn't run with any AV programs on my home machine and never had a problem. However, after Avast let something through on my wife's laptop last fall I switched her to AVG and put it on the machine downstairs.
        David

        The chief cause of failure in this life is giving up what you want most for what you want at the moment.

        Comment

        • cgallery
          Veteran Member
          • Sep 2004
          • 4503
          • Milwaukee, WI
          • BT3K

          #5
          Originally posted by crokett
          If you talk to enough people you will find that all the anti-virus programs have let something through at one time or another. The best protection is common sense. For years I didn't run with any AV programs on my home machine and never had a problem. However, after Avast let something through on my wife's laptop last fall I switched her to AVG and put it on the machine downstairs.
          +1

          I own a computer sales/service shop. We get 5-20 machines per week that are massively infected. All anti-virus products are represented.

          Some machines w/ Norton, McAfee, and Trend have no virus, but the anti-virus software is so hosed the machine won't boot or has other problems. Other machines w/ those products are infected to the max.

          AVG is on every machine that goes back out the door. The # of machines that boomerang (come back w/ a virus) after we install AVG is very low. It does happen (AVG is not foolproof), but we've been very happy with the performance.

          I continuously try other anti-virus products. The last time I used avast! and was googling I ended-up at a rogue page and was infected in no time.

          I took avast! off, put AVG on, and it cleaned it right up.

          Comment

          • JSUPreston
            Veteran Member
            • Dec 2005
            • 1189
            • Montgomery, AL.
            • Delta 36-979 w/Biesemyere fence kit making it a 36-982. Previous saw was BT3100-1.

            #6
            I had to rebuild my home machine last year after the (at the time) most current version of AVG and signature let a virus through that was over two years old at the time. I don't trust them any more, and don't recommend them.

            Also, hate Mcaffee (they screwed me out of a purchase years ago, still hold a grudge), Norton/Symantec (home products are too resource intensive and buggy, corporate stuff just doesn't work) and AVG (for reasons above). I"ve also run the Computer Associates stuff at two different jobs. It sucks as well.

            I used to like TrendMicro, but they bundle too much crap with it now. If I by AV, I want AV, not a firewall and other stuff. I'm currently running Avast, but don't really care for it either.

            My favorite was the old IBM antivirus, but it wouldn't work in today's world of needing real time scanning. The old IBM stuff was all manual, and it worked, until Norton bought it.

            Basically, I've seen something get through on every AV solution I've ever seen, even with all the patches and sig files up to date.

            Seems to me the best AV is the one that you've personally had the least trouble with that doesn't get in your way. FWIW, a quick google search shows that PC Mag is beating the Norton 2009 Suite drum. They state that it is the "slimmest, , most unobtrusive Norton ever." (http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2333445,00.asp)
            "It's a dog eat dog world out there, and I'm wearing Milk-Bone underwear."- Norm (from Cheers)

            Eat beef-because the west wasn't won on salad.

            Comment

            • BobSch
              Veteran Member
              • Aug 2004
              • 4385
              • Minneapolis, MN, USA.
              • BT3100

              #7
              Originally posted by JSUPreston
              FWIW, a quick google search shows that PC Mag is beating the Norton 2009 Suite drum. They state that it is the "slimmest, , most unobtrusive Norton ever." (http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2333445,00.asp)
              Ever? Or since Symantec bought Peter out? Saying Norton is slimmest ever strikes me like talking about a slim elephant.
              Bob

              Bad decisions make good stories.

              Comment

              • dbhost
                Slow and steady
                • Apr 2008
                • 9480
                • League City, Texas
                • Ryobi BT3100

                #8
                Not sure about Vista, but I have installed and used Clamwin on several XP boxes with good success.
                Please like and subscribe to my YouTube channel. Please check out and subscribe to my Workshop Blog.

                Comment

                • JSUPreston
                  Veteran Member
                  • Dec 2005
                  • 1189
                  • Montgomery, AL.
                  • Delta 36-979 w/Biesemyere fence kit making it a 36-982. Previous saw was BT3100-1.

                  #9
                  Originally posted by BobSch
                  Ever? Or since Symantec bought Peter out? Saying Norton is slimmest ever strikes me like talking about a slim elephant.
                  Probably since the buyout. Back when ol' Pete was involved, Norton made great products. Seems like anything Symantec gets a hold of goes to pot. Don't even get me started on their Backup Exec stuff.
                  "It's a dog eat dog world out there, and I'm wearing Milk-Bone underwear."- Norm (from Cheers)

                  Eat beef-because the west wasn't won on salad.

                  Comment

                  • MilDoc

                    #10
                    Relying on just ONE program for protection is, IMHO, foolish. I've used Norton since version 1, no problems. But now I also run ThreatFire, Registry Mechanic, and Spy Sweeper. Perhaps overkill, but I continue to be amazed when one program catches an intrusion the others missed, then another that the first missed, etc.

                    Comment

                    • siliconbauhaus
                      Senior Member
                      • Dec 2006
                      • 925
                      • hagerstown, md

                      #11
                      I used to run avg free...cos I'm a cheap *******. I then bought vipre after reading the write ups for it and it was under $50 for the whole house. Everything was ticktyboo until they released a new definition and it buggered up every comp in the house.

                      I immediately emiled them about it and they hed me un-install / re- install several times. I emailed them again saying that it still didn't work and they then sent me a link to bypass ( I guess) the updater.

                      I haven't re-installed it on anything yet.....but I'll give it a go this weekend and hopefully I'll have a fair ammount of shop time and not nurse maiding computers
                      パトリック
                      daiku woodworking
                      ^deshi^
                      neoshed

                      Comment

                      • Jim Padgett
                        Forum Newbie
                        • Apr 2006
                        • 8
                        • Richmond VA
                        • BT3100

                        #12
                        Sunbelt VIPRE

                        Sunbelt has good products.. I don't like to renew licenses, but how else is work to get done...

                        http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Home-Home-Office/VIPRE/

                        For cleaning and anti-malware..

                        www.malwarebytes.org

                        Comment

                        • Rand
                          Established Member
                          • May 2005
                          • 492
                          • Vancouver, WA, USA.

                          #13
                          Another vote for AVG free. The only problem I have had with it is scanning emails with large attachments. I had to turn off email scanning.

                          I also use the free version of Ad-Aware.
                          Rand
                          "If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like your thumb."

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