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#1
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I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell
computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and not a Norton error. However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am thinking of switching to Trend Micro. Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for offices; I believe there is this option. I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. Thanks. |
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#2
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and not a Norton error. However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am thinking of switching to Trend Micro. Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for offices; I believe there is this option. I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. Thanks. I, and many others in our Computer Club, stopped paying the extortionists and now use the free AVG anti-virus. Other items that we recommend to our members, is Windows Defender for spyware, a router/firewall and the Windows XP SP2 Firewall turned on. As one that makes 4 or 5 "house calls" a week on a volunteer basis, I have not had to remove a virus on a computer with these programs. http://free.grisoft.com |
#3
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Just be aware that AVG and the Office/Outlook 2007 beta has an issue where
you must turn off "certify" in the options for Outlook integration. Best thing is to not use the integration - I have not seen one product yet that does not interfere with Outlook's normal operation. -- Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook] Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. All unsolicited mail sent to my personal account will be deleted without reading. After furious head scratching, Chuck Davis asked: | wrote in message | ups.com... || I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell || computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it || slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my || files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only || intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and || not a Norton error. || || However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am || thinking of switching to Trend Micro. || || Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for || offices; I believe there is this option. || || I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. || || Thanks. || | I, and many others in our Computer Club, stopped paying the | extortionists and now use the free AVG anti-virus. Other items that | we recommend to our members, is Windows Defender for spyware, a | router/firewall and the Windows XP SP2 Firewall turned on. As one | that makes 4 or 5 "house calls" a week on a volunteer basis, I have | not had to remove a virus on a computer with these programs. | http://free.grisoft.com |
#4
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And I have peers that pay for AVG because they don't want advertizing in
their email messages. And of course AVG is free for personal use only. The others aren't extortionists, they are software application developers that like to pay their programmers and develop leading edge solutions (or at least what they think are leading edge... and solutions) That said, I do not like Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 as I found it very intrusive. I had to test it recently for antispam functionality and decided then I wouldn't use it if it was free. It tries to be more than I wanted and if you are just looking for antivirus, then Norton is possibly overkill. I found it frustrating for XP when you have multiple users set up as well. As for local firewall and security solutions: www.eeye.com/blink The free for personal use version will be up in a few weeks. http://www.techweb.com/wire/security/191600542 "Chuck Davis" newsgroup at anthemwebs dot com wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and not a Norton error. However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am thinking of switching to Trend Micro. Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for offices; I believe there is this option. I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. Thanks. I, and many others in our Computer Club, stopped paying the extortionists and now use the free AVG anti-virus. Other items that we recommend to our members, is Windows Defender for spyware, a router/firewall and the Windows XP SP2 Firewall turned on. As one that makes 4 or 5 "house calls" a week on a volunteer basis, I have not had to remove a virus on a computer with these programs. http://free.grisoft.com |
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#6
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William Lefkovics [MVP] wrote:
That said, I do not like Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 as I found it very intrusive. I had to test it recently for antispam functionality and decided then I wouldn't use it if it was free. It tries to be more than I wanted and if you are just looking for antivirus, then Norton is possibly overkill. I found it frustrating for XP when you have multiple users set up as well. The company for which I work uses Trend OfficeScan. We do NOT integrate it with Outlook. -- Brian Tillman |
#7
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I am solely talking about the Outlook integration, which, as I said before,
I have never seen any product produce a non-problematic integration with Outlook. Just my opinion. -- Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook] Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. All unsolicited mail sent to my personal account will be deleted without reading. After furious head scratching, William Lefkovics [MVP] asked: | And I have peers that pay for AVG because they don't want advertizing | in their email messages. And of course AVG is free for personal use | only. | | The others aren't extortionists, they are software application | developers that like to pay their programmers and develop leading | edge solutions (or at least what they think are leading edge... and | solutions) | | That said, I do not like Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 as I | found it very intrusive. I had to test it recently for antispam | functionality and decided then I wouldn't use it if it was free. It | tries to be more than I wanted and if you are just looking for | antivirus, then Norton is possibly overkill. I found it frustrating | for XP when you have multiple users set up as well. | | As for local firewall and security solutions: www.eeye.com/blink | The free for personal use version will be up in a few weeks. | http://www.techweb.com/wire/security/191600542 | | | | | | | "Chuck Davis" newsgroup at anthemwebs dot com wrote in message | ... || || wrote in message || ups.com... ||| I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell ||| computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it ||| slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my ||| files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only ||| intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and ||| not a Norton error. ||| ||| However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am ||| thinking of switching to Trend Micro. ||| ||| Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for ||| offices; I believe there is this option. ||| ||| I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. ||| ||| Thanks. ||| || I, and many others in our Computer Club, stopped paying the || extortionists and now use the free AVG anti-virus. Other items that || we recommend to our members, is Windows Defender for spyware, a || router/firewall and the Windows XP SP2 Firewall turned on. As one || that makes 4 or 5 "house calls" a week on a volunteer basis, I have || not had to remove a virus on a computer with these programs. || http://free.grisoft.com |
#8
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![]() "William Lefkovics [MVP]" wrote in message ... And I have peers that pay for AVG because they don't want advertizing in their email messages. And of course AVG is free for personal use only. The others aren't extortionists, they are software application developers that like to pay their programmers and develop leading edge solutions (or at least what they think are leading edge... and solutions) That said, I do not like Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 as I found it very intrusive. I had to test it recently for antispam functionality and decided then I wouldn't use it if it was free. It tries to be more than I wanted and if you are just looking for antivirus, then Norton is possibly overkill. I found it frustrating for XP when you have multiple users set up as well. As for local firewall and security solutions: www.eeye.com/blink The free for personal use version will be up in a few weeks. http://www.techweb.com/wire/security/191600542 "Chuck Davis" newsgroup at anthemwebs dot com wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and not a Norton error. However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am thinking of switching to Trend Micro. Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for offices; I believe there is this option. I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. Thanks. I, and many others in our Computer Club, stopped paying the extortionists and now use the free AVG anti-virus. Other items that we recommend to our members, is Windows Defender for spyware, a router/firewall and the Windows XP SP2 Firewall turned on. As one that makes 4 or 5 "house calls" a week on a volunteer basis, I have not had to remove a virus on a computer with these programs. http://free.grisoft.com I still have a problem with the computer "protection" industry. Extortion or greed? McAfee's 2006 projected revenue of $1.1 billion and Symantec's 2006 projected revenue of $5.164 billion to has to be protected somehow... |
#9
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Thank you all for replying.
I need a virus checker and a firewall. I will have Outlook 2003. It appears that the consensus is not to go with a "suite" per se but to have separate components - e.g. a virus checker and a separate firewall. Any more opinions on firewalls to employ? In addition, I have heard mixed opinions about using Adware or Spybot for malware. I have heard that either / or can attack files that may not be malicious and therefore cause problems to your computer. I have had too many glitches with these new computers, that I am hoping to have the protection I need, but with minimal disruption to my programs and computer - I typically send out many emails to reporters during the day and receive emails as well, and use word and excel. Thanks. Brian Tillman wrote: wrote: However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am thinking of switching to Trend Micro. Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for offices; I believe there is this option. Many people like the free Avast or AVG antivirus programs. Both are every bit as good as the commercial AV programs and you can purchase a commercial version if you want tech support. However, no matter what AV program you buy, there is no reason to scan incoming, or especially outgoing, mail. It causes more problems than it cures. -- Brian Tillman |
#10
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Regaridng "Blink" - for a single home based user - is this what I would
need or is it designed for a corporate envrironment? Thanks. William Lefkovics [MVP] wrote: And I have peers that pay for AVG because they don't want advertizing in their email messages. And of course AVG is free for personal use only. The others aren't extortionists, they are software application developers that like to pay their programmers and develop leading edge solutions (or at least what they think are leading edge... and solutions) That said, I do not like Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 as I found it very intrusive. I had to test it recently for antispam functionality and decided then I wouldn't use it if it was free. It tries to be more than I wanted and if you are just looking for antivirus, then Norton is possibly overkill. I found it frustrating for XP when you have multiple users set up as well. As for local firewall and security solutions: www.eeye.com/blink The free for personal use version will be up in a few weeks. http://www.techweb.com/wire/security/191600542 "Chuck Davis" newsgroup at anthemwebs dot com wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... I've been using Norton Internet Security Suite 2006 with a new Dell computer and Microsoft Small Business Edition 2003. I felt that it slowed down my system, I got CCAP errors (so had to update all my files), and recently I could not but could just receive (only intermittently) - the latter may have been a computer or windows and not a Norton error. However, I will be getting a replacement computer soon, and am thinking of switching to Trend Micro. Any opinions? I would try to get the one that is corporate or for offices; I believe there is this option. I also know they have free tech support and wondered how that is. Thanks. I, and many others in our Computer Club, stopped paying the extortionists and now use the free AVG anti-virus. Other items that we recommend to our members, is Windows Defender for spyware, a router/firewall and the Windows XP SP2 Firewall turned on. As one that makes 4 or 5 "house calls" a week on a volunteer basis, I have not had to remove a virus on a computer with these programs. http://free.grisoft.com |
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