Yup - already on the SCCM list.

>>> Jon Harris <[email protected]> 2/26/2010 5:18 PM >>>
Are both of you aware of the MyITForums? They have one of the best
support lists for all things System Center and before.
Jon

On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 10:40 PM, James Hill
<[email protected]> wrote:



SCCM is a mammoth beast of a thing that doesn’t “just work”. It is a
really powerful product and can make a number of things very very easy.
But it isn’t a product that you can just install and have it mastered
soon after.

You have to like hunting through log files JJust because the gui (the
slowest one in the world) said it worked doesn’t mean it did.

I’m able to keep it behaving most of the time now but it has taken
quite a long time to get to this stage. It’s easy to see why the list
for it is so busy. Having said that it is also clear that what can be
done with it is almost endless and that I’ve only really scratched the
surface.


From:Tom Miller [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, 26 February 2010 11:53 AM 
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: VIPRE versus Trend (now SCCM and Quest etc) 



Okay turning away from Vipre, but I hear you on the SCCM thing. The
price is right, but it's not good enough, as I and my colleage have
spend many, many manhours just trying to manage SCCM. I've been testing
the KACE KBox (now owned by Dell) and have been *very* impressed. The
agent install is so easy compared to the SCCM agent that there is no
comparison. There is a huge community and list for SCCM, but I find it
hard to keep up and we don't have dedicated staff for workstation
management. It makes me miss Zenworks. And is it me but the SCCM "wait
and it will happen" is crazy.


Regarding your comment of the Quest tools, I also purchased the Quest
NDS migrator and was very disappointed in the product. Instead I just
wrote my own scripts to remove the Novell client, Zen, iprint, etc and
we now only use the workstation migrator, which rarely works. 


But my Vipre installs rarely failed, except when Symanect refused to
uninstall and they both ended up being on the same machine. Not pretty
but I guess that was my fault as my scripts didn't check for that.
Oops.


Tom Miller
Engineer, Information Technology
Hampton-Newport News Community Services Board
757-788-0528


>>> "Ray" 02/25/10 5:29 PM >>>
I for one am looking forward to this. We have McAfee and are testing
Vipre. We also had issues with Conflicker and Iloma, and were less than
impressed with the McAfee responses. Of course, that might be par for
the course when these things hit. 

We’ve also spent months trying to get SCCM deployed. It’s been an
arduous task even with MS help. All kinds of issues with BITS, COM, WMI,
permissions, etc. To be fair, we had a whole lot of trouble with the
Quest tools when we were converting from Novell. Too many models, too
many images, etc etc. 

What we wish we had when we started with SCCM was a checklist of what’s
needed, or even some kind of “pre-requisite”. Of course, SCCM Console
does have a pre-requisite scan, and on a new PC, it still failed to
install after passing the pre-req. 

Hopefully Vipre will have something that ensure successful
installations. 


From:Alex Eckelberry [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 3:06 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: VIPRE versus Trend


Going through this list, there are a number of things I can think of
that would be causing these issues. Most, if not all, are configuration
issues. Cookies, for example, should be set to Report Only. 

The Dell biometric issue is over a year old. 

The Confiker issue you're dealing with is due to Confiker being in your
environment (from whatever, an unpatched system or a user bringing an
infected USB stick) and agents being upgraded and real-time protection
being turned off during the upgrade. While this can be managed by the
admin, we have dealt with this in version 4 being released next week. 

I would just recommend a call with management here at Sunbelt to go
over in detail your environment. 

Alex

Alex Eckelberry, CEO 
Sunbelt Software
33 N. Garden Avenue, Clearwater, FL 33755 p: 727-562-0101 x220 
e: [email protected]: [email protected]
w: www.sunbeltsoftware.comb: www.sunbeltblog.com







From:Greg Olson [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 4:34 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: VIPRE versus Trend


I have to +1 with this assessment. We’re having all the issues reported
below and more. My director of customer support has had it now, and is
lobbying hard to get rid of it. I really wanted to see it work well, and
lobbied hard to get in into play. And perhaps the new version will fix
some if it. I really do believe Sunbelt will get it up to snuff
eventually, but its hard to justify our support staff spending 60% of
their time on Vipre issues. 

Here’s a copy of some of an email he sent to myself and our VP of IT. I
put some comments in () below.
Quote:
Here is a summary of the problems that we are facing with Vipre from
the information that I gathered from my team:


a.Vipre becomes inactive on machines for no evident reason. When VIpre
support was contacted the response was that this will be fixed in the
next version upgrade (hoping it will, nervous about jumping to the new
version though, but are testing it)
b.Vipre starts crashing user machines. This behavior is seen in
machines that also run the security software by Dell which works on disk
encryption and biometric authentication. According to viper the only
solution is to not use the Dell security software which is not a good
option because with the proposed windows 7 rollout we are planning to
implement disk encryption and also the biometric authentication is a
good feature to use in windows 7. (This I thought was fixed, but I
listened in on the support call he had with Sunbelt, and the Tech did
say it might still have issues with the newer version, but he (meaning
us) will just have to try it an see)
c.Vipre gets uninstalled from clients: This happened in a few instances
and when contacted by viper this happens if the definitions downloaded
by the client are not installed appropriately and there is no solution
for this problem according to viper. They claim that this issue is
resolved in their latest version but we will not know that for sure
until we start having these problems again but there is no way to detect
these problems until a client reports this themselves which is very
unlikely. (very disturbing, and has left us with over 30 laptops that
have had this issue so far, including the CIO’s machine, defiantly need
some sort of patch upgrade failback and retry, it should NEVER uninstall
its self and leave a machine totally venerable, I’m pretty sure they
will fix this one in the new version, its too insane not too)
d.Vipre starts a scan as soon as the machines boots and utilizes all
the available system resources making it impossible for the user to log
in. The only solution to this problem according to viper is to disable
the agent on the machine in safe mode and reboot the machine, let the
user log in and then enable the agent again. This is happening pretty
frequently and is causing a lot of productivity downtime. (need to have
a min do not scan till xyz minutes after a boot-up to fix this)
e.False alarms: we are getting at least 20 to 25 false alarms everyday
when viper opens tickets for browser cookies which are mostly harmless
and are removed as soon as the user closes his browser session (we have
cookies allowed as fyi, but this doesn’t really worry me, the removal of
good programs does), sometimes viper is detecting genuine software to be
malicious and is quarantining or deleting them making the user reinstall
programs. We can add all these false alarms as exceptions in viper
policy and make it work but this will add a huge overhead based on the
amount of false alarms we are getting. For example Vipre quarantined its
own executables and some HP management software executables as threats.
f.No malware engine. Vipre doesn’t seem to have a malware engine or the
engine is pretty useless because thus far we have not seen viper detect
any malware infections at all. Recently we came across a malware that
was causing user machines to reboot as soon as they login and viper was
not able to detect it via safe mode or command line utility. We had to
install third party solutions in most of the cases where users reported
infections to get them cleaned as viper is neither preventing nor
cleaning the infections.
g.Known threats. We are having at least a few instances everyday where
user machines are infected with known exploits and threats and viper,
with active protection running, does not prevent or detect the
viruses/Trojans/worms etc and we are ending up installing other
applications (Symantec endpoint, zonealarm, malware bytes etc) to get
rid of these infections.
h.Deployments: Vipre has been horrible as far as remote deployments are
concerned rolling out viper in our enterprise was a nightmare. Took us 3
months as most of the times remote deployment either failed or cause
system issues, I believe lot of us within the team had issues with the
deployments too including the CTO. Even now the deployments are a matter
of luck, if we are lucky it works if we are not it doesn’t and if it
hates the tech it will say it deployed but wont turn on. (Remove
Symantec tool from Sunbelt was also being used in the install, and may
have had a hand in some of these complaints)

Prior to viper we were using Symantec v9 or v10 on all our clients(not
even endpoint protection) and the only time we had higher volume of
problems was conficker, now with viper my team is spending 60% of its
time everyday resolving pc issues related to viruses/Trojans/malware etc
or even worse resolving issues caused by viper. I understand there are
claims that the next version of viper is going to resolve most of the
above mentioned issues but thus far they are just claims and given the
quality of tech support we are receiving from sunbelt I wouldn’t vouch
for it.

Given this scenario I would, on behalf of my entire team, recommend
rolling back to Symantec and work on improving our patch management
which would have saved us from issues like conficker than spend half of
my team’s time everyday resolving the above mentioned problems. Also,
the stress levels of the users are very clearly being displayed and my
team is facing their wrath. This is killing my teams productivity and
morale and I would recommend we act on it immediately. I am definitely
open to other recommendations but please, if you think viper’s next
version is the solution, shoot me.

End quote. 


So not all that good. But I will push to get the new version up into a
good size (100+ users) test audience before having to go back to
Symantec. Uggh, Symantec…. Uggh…..

-Greg




From:Steve Kelsay [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:43 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: VIPRE versus Trend


I wish I could be more optimistic, but We are using the Vipre
Enterprise. It does an excellent job of protecting us, when I can keep
it running. It seems like it just is not ready for primetime. Sunbelt
had their top tech go through our entire network setup during a recent
Konficker attack, and it is still not really stable. 

I can look at the console and believe it is running wonderfully, until
scans start without any identifiable cause, effectively shutting down
servers with 100% Cpu usage, but that scan never shows up on the remote
console, although the machines are sending last contact info, and last
scan info, the off time scans never show up. I lobbied hard to get
Vipre, and really want it to succeed, but it is not looking good at this
time. A deep scan starts on many machines as soon as anyone logs onto
the machine, and that will also peg the CPU meter. No reason we can tell
for this to happen.


From:Raper, Jonathan - Eagle [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 4:26 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: VIPRE versus Trend


All,

We’re looking to move away from McAfee. Right now we’re considering
Trend Micro OfficeScan Enterprise and the VIPRE Enterprise products.

Anyone here (aside from Sunbelt employees) have any experience with
both of the current or relatively current iterations of the products?

Can you provide any reasons to choose one over the other, aside from
price?

Thanks in advance,
Jonathan L. Raper, A+, MCSA, MCSE
Technology Coordinator
Eagle Physicians & Associates, PA
[email protected]
www.eaglemds.com 


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