I finally got a reply from Zone Lab support.  Here is what they said:

Hello James,

Thank you for your e-mail

If you shutdown ZoneAlarm by right clicking the ZA icon by the time and
choose shutdown ZoneAlarm, does the issue still occur? If it still occurs
while ZoneAlarm is shutdown and is only resolved by uninstalling
ZoneAlarm, more than likely the software is conflicting with the way we load
our antivirus monitor and IM security features. Please follow the steps
below to add the program that is not working to the bypass list. This will
allow your program to not be scanned by IM Secure.

1.) Double click the My Computer
2.) Double click the (C:)
3.) Double click the Program Files Folder
4.) Double click the ZoneLabs Folder
5.) Double click the ZoneAlarm Folder
6.) Double click on imf_editor
7.) Put a dot next to Filter all apps except blacklisted
8.) Click the Blacklist Tab
9.) Click the Browse Button
10.) Browse to the executable file of the program that is not working and
double click it.
11.) Click OK.
12.) Now restart your computer and test again for the issue.

Thank you for choosing ZoneLabs,

Jesse
Technical Service
Zone Labs
A Check Point Company
************************
I did what they suggested even though I had Cache working again. Now I get 2 blue cubes in the system tray.

Jim Gray
\
----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Toppenberg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, August 15, 2005 3:28 PM
Subject: [Hardhats-members] Re: Warning about Zone Alarm


I think Windows has a way to control services.  Its in the Control
Panel->Administrative tools->services

It lists all services and allows editing of whether the service is
running, and whether to start up automatically.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not a big Windows fan.

Kevin


On 8/15/05, Mike Lieman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 8/15/05, Kevin Toppenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does linux firewall (iptables) do that per-application type of
> blocking?  For incoming traffic, it seems to be able to map packets to
> a given service.  But I don't know about outgoing packets.
>
> Kevin
>

iptables, (netfilter) doesn't do that, as far as I know.  But I'm not
sure it's needed.

First step in linux deployment for me, is to shutdown unused services.
 That's IMPOSSIBLE with Windows, for practical purposes, so you need
to keep the Bad Guys away from the interesting, open ports.

I'm NOT a big fan of Windows Firewalls.  I just don't trust them.  I
use linux as my NAT/Gateway server for the whole subnet.


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