Posted on 03/30/2005 9:50:57 AM PST by holymoly
Free Anti-Virus Software: Antidote SuperLite On-demand virus checker. Detects, doesn't clean. Huge virus database (excellent back-up scanner). AntiVir® Personal Edition AVG Anti-Virus F-Prot Antivirus The MS-DOS version is free McAfee Stinger On-demand scanner. Detects & cleans a small number of virii/trojans (around 50). Fits on a 3.5" floppy. |
When I tired of Norton's glitches I changed to AVG and have never been happier. It's completely automatic and updates virtually every day.
I too have switched from Norton to AVG. Glad I did. I've never had a virus infect me while I had AVG installed. I can not say the same thing about Norton.
read later
I gave up on all Symantec Norton products years ago because they are such resource hogs. I switched to Trend Micro's PC-Cillin and couldn't be happier. It updates its virus definitions every hour, quietly in the background.
I switched over to AVG three years ago and have been virus free and trouble free . . . and there's a whole lot more money in my pocket for not buying back into Norton, too.
Three cheers for AVG!
Ping
Avast is also free and I've found it better than AVG.
ping
I think when my subscription runs out on Norton, I'll try the other scanners too and see how they do. Bookmark Bump!
As I recall, while free, Avast requires "registration", and this regsitration must be renewed every 12 months.
IMO If it's free, it should jus that - free. No strings attached.
There ARE better AV programs out there, like Kaspersky, but Avast is doing alright. I used Norton for many years, stopped last year when I got a few viruses.
Just in case, I'll occasionally run a couple of online scanners. They have caught a few things for me (Trend Micro and Panda).
I use F-Prot, which is a yearly subscription with free updates. I've been very satisfied with it.
Just watch... to fix these flaws, that will require the user to pay for the update...
I should have added... eventually... ;)
1. Screwed me out of about 9 months of updates for which I paid.
2. Screwed me out of a mail-in rebate.
3. Gave me no end of trouble with a certain email-borne virus. For some reason, they could not detect it until the email that carried it was added to the inbox file. Once that happened, they locked up the whole file and couldn't fix it, so all I could do was delete the file. Then my entire inbox was gone. Their support people were unable or unwilling to do anything about it.
Better, how so? Serious question.
It picked up more viruses after I ran it following the use of AVG. Unless these were false positives, I'd call that better.
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