Poll
Question:
Bitdefender vs. Kaspersky vs. Panda vs. Fsecure vs. AVG vs. Avast Pro
Option 1: Bitdefender
votes: 0
Option 2: Kaspersky
votes: 8
Option 3: Panda
votes: 1
Option 4: Fsecure
votes: 1
Option 5: AVG
votes: 0
Option 6: Avast Pro
votes: 4
Option 7: Others
votes: 4
Vote for the best Paid Antivirus according to you. :P :P
If others specify here.
Avira Internet Security
Quote from: Maher on February 09, 2012, 04:10 PM
Avira Internet Security
I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm in love with Microsoft Security Essentials. It's freeware, meaning you'll never have to worry about cracks expiring or updates that won't come down. It takes up very few system resources and is highly configurable. Even when it finds something strange, it asks you what to do. You have the option of clicking "details", and it'll tell you the file plus what it found. This is excellent for the many false positives you find in keygens and patches. For example, the other day it picked something up. When I asked for more details, the file in question was "Craagle" and the description "crack finder". Naturally I clicked "allow", after which it'll never bother me again about Craagle.
Quote from: humb25 on February 10, 2012, 04:56 AM
Quote from: Maher on February 09, 2012, 04:10 PM
Avira Internet Security
I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm in love with Microsoft Security Essentials. It's freeware, meaning you'll never have to worry about cracks expiring or updates that won't come down. It takes up very few system resources and is highly configurable. Even when it finds something strange, it asks you what to do. You have the option of clicking "details", and it'll tell you the file plus what it found. This is excellent for the many false positives you find in keygens and patches. For example, the other day it picked something up. When I asked for more details, the file in question was "Craagle" and the description "crack finder". Naturally I clicked "allow", after which it'll never bother me again about Craagle.
AGREE WITH YOU :D :D
Hello my dear friends, :)
My favorite Paid AntiVirus is ESET NOD32.
That's because one reason which is:
My PC is slow and all I need is light antivirus. I mean doesn't slow PC more.
But I haven't tried Avira or Microsoft Security Essentials before.
Kaspersky is the best and its worth using it..
The best i've had and used was Eset, i got free unlimited license from my dads job. :)
I'm sold on Microsoft Security Essentials. It's free, updates come down by themselves, and it never expires. It uses every little system resources and constantly patrols your system in the background for nasty software. Not only that, but before taking action it first asks you what it found, what file(s) is involved and what to do. On many occasions I've seen a keygen labeled simply as "keygen/hacktool", which tells me right there to click "Allow". I've tried almost every antivirus available, and as yet I've seen nothing better.
Then again, I've yet to see 2 identical computer configurations. Everyone likes something different.
:o :o :o
Well, for me... its avast! Internet Security... with free .avalistc File!
Haha! It's capable to update though it is not registered to my name... ;D
Well, the most important is that our antivirus are up-to-date.
For me, the best shareware antivirus was Kaspersky. Since 2006 till version 2012. Last version is heavy and slow any computer to the old calculator level. :)
Avast... It's like an artillery battery. It can destroy straight and visible dangers in any numbers, but against diversions (i.e. rootkits) it looks very poor.
Quote from: Daniil on August 04, 2012, 04:28 PM
For me, the best shareware antivirus was Kaspersky. Since 2006 till version 2012. Last version is heavy and slow any computer to the old calculator level. :)
Avast... It's like an artillery battery. It can destroy straight and visible dangers in any numbers, but against diversions (i.e. rootkits) it looks very poor.
I don't think there's anything that bothers me more than these programs that are great and them become so bloated as to be useless. As for Avast, let me ask you something - does it just attack or can it be configured to ask first? I asking because on the torrents not only do you get many false positives but also because patches do what viruses do - go in and modify the file.
Yes, as I can remember, in Avast you can set up "ask first".