Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
I was recommended to use Malwarebytes and I have no complaints yet.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Crandar
I was recommended to use Malwarebytes and I have no complaints yet.
I had always heard good things about Malwarebytes (and SuperAntiSpyware), and have recommended it to people myself. However it's not what you'd traditionally call anti-virus.
Here's is Malwarebytes explanation of the difference between the two, but personally I always thought of antivirus of something that is always running and watching (or attempting to watch) for infected files. Malware, otoh, is something that scans memory or running processes for malicious code and it's usually run on demand.
I think the line is getting more and more blurred- but I see no issue with an on-demand scanner. I am getting sour on always-on anti-virus that's dragging down my PC. :yes:
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Being at least half-decent in the way I use my Windows computers + AVG free edition -> one reportedly infected file in the past decade+
I can't remember what MSE does, I may have some of that opened up as well (windows firewall and a couple other things).
Then again, I pretty much use Windows these days only for videogames. I've transitioned to linux for all the other computational problems of my life, and with that the virus/malware problem has vanished.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
I generally will just run sporadic scans every so often with programs like MB, MSE, etc. Never have any AV constantly protecting/running on my PC and I don't have any problems at all.
That being said I rarely venture to unfamiliar websites and things like that.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Been running Eset NOD32 for years and ive only had 1 security issue and that was from my own stupidity. Literally ignored and canceled all the warnings that popped up.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Csargo
I generally will just run sporadic scans every so often with programs like MB, MSE, etc. Never have any AV constantly protecting/running on my PC and I don't have any problems at all.
Click here for your FREE PC check!
That being said I rarely venture to unfamiliar websites and things like that.
Um, sure, whatever you say. :laugh4:
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
So I uninstalled it. It improved the post-login somewhat, not night and day though. Meh. :shrug:
I still feel somewhat "naked" without antivirus- but I just have to remind myself that I can't remember the last time MSE actually detected anything, if ever in the years that I've used it.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Out of curiosity, does anyone here have any experience with Kaspersky?
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Xiahou
So I uninstalled it. It improved the post-login somewhat, not night and day though. Meh. :shrug:
I still feel somewhat "naked" without antivirus- but I just have to remind myself that I can't remember the last time MSE actually detected anything, if ever in the years that I've used it.
I came across a very good tip for fast logging in which made a big difference to my set-up.
Run msconfig, and go to the boot tab. Make the 'timeout' 3 seconds, and go on advanced options, then make it so it uses all your cores (I got a quad-core, so 4) and enable it to use maximum memory.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Beskar
I came across a very good tip for fast logging in which made a big difference to my set-up.
Run msconfig, and go to the boot tab. Make the 'timeout' 3 seconds, and go on advanced options, then make it so it uses all your cores (I got a quad-core, so 4) and enable it to use maximum memory.
I tried it and got BSODs. ~:eek:
I was able to recover it by booting repair mode, getting a command prompt and using bcdedit to remove the entries that were modified by msconfig. I don't doubt that it worked good on your system, but I post this as a cautionary note to others who might make the changes. Depending on your setup, it could improve things, but it's not without risk*. :sweatdrop:
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Xiahou
I still feel somewhat "naked" without antivirus- but I just have to remind myself that I can't remember the last time MSE actually detected anything, if ever in the years that I've used it.
How is that an indicator for anything? As much as I'm a Microsoft fan, I wouldn't quite trust MSE to catch every virus, so the lack of notifications may just as well mean that a lot slips past and works quietly in the background without you ever noticing it. Might also explain your slow startups. ~;)
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Xiahou
I tried it and got BSODs. ~:eek:
I was able to recover it by booting repair mode, getting a command prompt and using
bcdedit to remove the entries that were modified by msconfig. I don't doubt that it worked good on your system, but I post this as a cautionary note to others who might make the changes. Depending on your setup, it could improve things, but it's not without risk*. :sweatdrop:
The BSODs might be related to hardware issues on your end or needing to update drivers. You would experience the same issues if you were running a game or so.. because all it is doing is giving permission to use all your cores/memory on boot-up.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Beskar
The BSODs might be related to hardware issues on your end or needing to update drivers. You would experience the same issues if you were running a game or so.. because all it is doing is giving permission to use all your cores/memory on boot-up.
Gaming performance is actually quite good. Rock solid stability and it provides good FPS on modern games for a system that's over 5 years old.
I think I figured out the problem, but I doubt I'll bother confirming it because it turns out that the boot settings are just for debugging anyhow and your system will use the max available memory and cores by default. All the boot options can do is artificially limit it.
For the record though, I suspect it was the max memory setting. There is a 1MB discrepancy between what Windows sees available (8191MB) and what msconfig filled in when I checked the box (8192). :shrug:
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Husar
How is that an indicator for anything? As much as I'm a Microsoft fan, I wouldn't quite trust MSE to catch every virus, so the lack of notifications may just as well mean that a lot slips past and works quietly in the background without you ever noticing it. Might also explain your slow startups. ~;)
At the very least, it's an indication that MSE is providing no value to me. Either it's missing viruses or I'm not getting any (the most likely option). Either way, there's no much sense in having it installed.
Coincidentally, I had a chance to test anti-virus efficacy at work yesterday....
I had an obvious phony email in my junk folder about a bill for a delivery from some company I never have done any business with. The email had an attachment, which was a zip file. I looked in the zip file and it had an .exe file in it- obviously malware. :rolleyes:
So I scanned the zip file against VirusTotal. Of the 40+ engines it threw at the file, only 6 identified the file as a trojan. The rest said there was nothing wrong with it. (Note: I did this on a linux VM. I wouldn't have touched the zip file on a physical Windows PC.)
Conclusion: The best virus protection is common sense. :yes:
I do still recommend on demand scans like Malwarebytes- especially if you have less than safe browsing habits... like not using NoScript or a good ad blocker like Ublock Origin.
Re: Antivirus: yay or nay?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Xiahou
For the record though, I suspect it was the max memory setting. There is a 1MB discrepancy between what Windows sees available (8191MB) and what msconfig filled in when I checked the box (8192). :shrug:
That would explain it, I think.