I've removed AVG Free 2011 from one machine and replaced it with Microsoft
Security Essentials, and will give it a fair trial. So far I'm impressed
with its politeness. 

I'm disappointed that Windows Update classes its MSE Update as Optional (one
of 36, the others all language options) as the way I read its blurb, the
Updates should occur transparently (and I would class anti-malware as more
than an Optional update). 

 

  _____  

Ian Thomas
Victoria Park, Western Australia

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Greg Keogh
Sent: Saturday, March 19, 2011 2:43 PM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: RE: [OT] Anti-Virus replacement for AVG

 

Folks, this morning I "cleaned" a friend's Windows XP machine that had
slowly crumbled into chaos. When I manually removed a crippling virus from
this machine 6 months ago I told the technically incompetent owner to NEVER
install any software unless she is ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN that it's needed, and
I warned her to look for sneaky options to include toolbars and other
"offers".

 

So I find Zone Alarm running and popping up pleading to buy it, there are
two toolbars, some registry cleaner, Google updaters, Java updaters,
IncrediGames, kitten wallpapers and weird startup items in the registry
pointing to missing files. I clean all this up and find that AVG will not
uninstall because of missing files (probably deleted by a virus), so I have
to download and install AVG 10 again (120MB!!) and then uninstall it.

 

I install Security Essentials and it finds and deletes two infections during
its first quick scan. So I'm quite impressed by that. The UI is unobtrusive
and it shows nothing in procexp or autoruns, which makes me happy and
suspicious at the same time: how can such a powerful tool not appear in
processes or startups? I believe it's something to do with a "filter
manager" because I had to install KB914882 on my wife's machine before
Security Essentials would install (hmmm... see HERE
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/914882> ). Perhaps this is a case of how
the OS manufacturer's inside knowledge is advantageous.

 

Greg

Reply via email to