Atom processors and antivirus??

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Mike Nomad

Re: Atom processors and antivirus??
« Reply #20 on: 28 Feb 2010, 04:49 pm »

Thanks to everyone who replied.  After a little research based on the recommendations here I am going to try MSE, and pending the outcome, I may try Avast. 

 I am under the impression that MSE includes a firewall and that the free version of Avast doesn't.  Got to have a firewall.


MSE does not have a firewall. Rather, you use the one that comes with the OS.

WGH

Re: Atom processors and antivirus??
« Reply #21 on: 28 Feb 2010, 05:21 pm »
If you're on cable/dsl with a router that has a firewall, why do you need a firewall on your computer?

If you just use the computer for email and a little web surfing then the router along with the Windows Firewall is usually good enough as long as you have a little common sense. But most people aren't much smarter than a bag of hammers which can get you into trouble. When Aunt Flo sends you an attachment with a malicious program a good firewall will let you know and can block it from phoning home. Lately I have been getting emails directing me to fake banking websites, a worm would be installed through your web browser and a firewall would stop it from downloading further instructions.

You can also pick up a few nasties if you download programs using bittorent. Even if you do get a worm it does no damage if it is blocked by a firewall and can't connect to the internet.

The Windows Firewall in XP, Vista, and 7 does not have good outbound packet filtering. Windows Vista’s built-in Firewall does a decent job of blocking incoming requests. It is capable of blocking outgoing requests as well but that feature is turned off by default. A firewall that doesn't have any control over outgoing traffic is quite dangerous because a malicious program can mass-email spam, forward passwords, credit card details and any other critical information to the wrong person.

Wayne 

Wind Chaser

Re: Atom processors and antivirus??
« Reply #22 on: 28 Feb 2010, 10:39 pm »
If you're on cable/dsl with a router that has a firewall, why do you need a firewall on your computer?

I don't think my router has a firewall because my IP provides a separate software based security suite which includes a firewall.  In other words, when I remove their software, I lose their firewall.  I could be wrong, but that's how I understand it.

bregez

Re: Atom processors and antivirus??
« Reply #23 on: 28 Feb 2010, 11:54 pm »
I like AVG, but have noticed it has become extremely bloated within the last two version updates. Another good utility to add to the arsenal is Malwarebytes.  It does a good job at identifying and removing things that Anti Virus programs do not pick up.  I also second mshan’s advice to use CCleaner (previously called Crap Cleaner).  It deletes all the cache files on the drive that are not needed. 

chip

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Re: Atom processors and antivirus??
« Reply #24 on: 9 Mar 2010, 05:02 pm »
Here is a list of PC tools I run on my PCs

PC Tools -
CCleaner
Defraggler
Revo Uninstaller

Spyware/Anti Virus
Ad-Aware
Malwarebytes
Spybot
AVG AnitVirus


Easy way to get apps installed -

http://ninite.com/ - I have used this one many times
http://www.smartinstallerpack.com/ - I have not tried this one yet.


Places to look for good free apps
www.filehippo.com
http://www.majorgeeks.com/
www.snapfiles.com


ctviggen

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  • Posts: 5251
Re: Atom processors and antivirus??
« Reply #25 on: 9 Mar 2010, 05:35 pm »
If you just use the computer for email and a little web surfing then the router along with the Windows Firewall is usually good enough as long as you have a little common sense. But most people aren't much smarter than a bag of hammers which can get you into trouble. When Aunt Flo sends you an attachment with a malicious program a good firewall will let you know and can block it from phoning home. Lately I have been getting emails directing me to fake banking websites, a worm would be installed through your web browser and a firewall would stop it from downloading further instructions.

You can also pick up a few nasties if you download programs using bittorent. Even if you do get a worm it does no damage if it is blocked by a firewall and can't connect to the internet.

The Windows Firewall in XP, Vista, and 7 does not have good outbound packet filtering. Windows Vista’s built-in Firewall does a decent job of blocking incoming requests. It is capable of blocking outgoing requests as well but that feature is turned off by default. A firewall that doesn't have any control over outgoing traffic is quite dangerous because a malicious program can mass-email spam, forward passwords, credit card details and any other critical information to the wrong person.

Wayne

Good points.  I do have Windows firewall enabled on all of my computers.  I do share info, though, between computers.