No prob. I really liked the Norton series. I've used it for about 10 years now in one form or other. It's been a pretty good product, and NIS2010 isn't nearly the resource hog that 2009 was. I'd still use it except for the SONAR thing. It's too aggressive, IMO, and Symantec doesn't seem to have a fix for that. If they fix it, then I'll probably use it again.Thanks Mellon Head, that was a useful overview. Most of your problems would not apply to me, so I guess I will dare to do it. I have a relatively muscular system, so resource usage is not a concern.
I'd do it if I were you, too. A big long license like that. Why not?![]()
Since you are now going the MSE route, I would suggest a couple of precautions:
1. Do a scan with SAS (Superantispyware) every 3 days or so. It was SAS that caught the trojan and browser highjacker in my system that MSE had missed.
2. Image, image, image. I take an automatic image every morning when I boot the system. That goes to a folder on an internal HDD. For my system and data partitions (on the SSD) it takes only 8 minutes for both.
Then every Sunday I transfer the latest image to a weekly image folder on an external disk. And every first Sunday in the month I transfer an image to a monthly folder to another external disk that is normally detached from the system.
Thus I have 3 levels of images and I can go back to any point in time all the way back to the initial installation. And with the montly image folder being off-line, I can be 100% sure that nothing will happen to that one.
I use free Macrium, but any other imaging program will do the job too.
My Computer
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
- OS
- Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
- CPU
- from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 2x HP w2207
- Hard Drives
- 5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
- Keyboard
- with trackball - no mices
- Mouse
- Trackball mice
- Internet Speed
- DSL 6000