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Thread: Vista v.s. Norton

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Vista v.s. Norton
"John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com> 09.07.2007 14:32:25
When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
Norton which I now use on XP?
Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?

Your help will be much appreciated

John King


Re: Vista v.s. Norton
Bruce Chambers <bchambers[ at ]cable0ne.n3t> 09.07.2007 14:43:39
John King wrote:
[Quoted Text]
> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
> Norton which I now use on XP?


Well, a great many people would argue that you should dispense with
"Norton" on WinXP, as well. Any number of other anti-virus applications
would have a much lower impact upon your system's performance. I once
used, and recommended, Norton Antivirus and then Norton Internet
Security, for many years, on Win98, WinNT, Win2K, and WinXP. However,
when my subscription to Symantec's updates for Norton Internet Security
2002 came up for renewal (at a cost substantially higher than the
preceding year's subscription), I decided to try less expensive
solutions. I downloaded and installed the free version of GriSoft's AVG
(http://www.grisoft.com/us/us_dwnl_free.php ) and the free version of
AVAST (http://www.avast.com/). Additionally, I was pleasantly surprised
to see a very noticeable improvement in my PC's performance, once I'd
replaced the Symantec product.


> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?
>

No, Vista has no built-in anti-virus capability; you'll still need to
install a 3rd party application for this purpose. Vista does include a
firewall that's adequate when properly configured, and Windows Defender,
an anti-spyware/adware tool.


--

Bruce Chambers

Help us help you:
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safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin

Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Milo" <jfcoel[ at ]hotmail.com> 09.07.2007 14:46:14
Vista as an operating system offers highten security with UAC ( for
prevention ) and among other things, but its not an antivirus by itself or
which has a mechanism to( filter and identify ) viruses and ( delete )such
if ever you or anyone accumulated it. Yet it has with it a built in Windows
Defender for spyware and malware you would encounter on the market today.

"John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:%23d6dwXjwHHA.3684[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text]
> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
> Norton which I now use on XP?
> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?
>
> Your help will be much appreciated
>
> John King
>
>

Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Ken Blake, MVP" <kblake[ at ]this.is.am.invalid.domain> 09.07.2007 19:55:51
On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 15:32:25 +0100, "John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com>
wrote:

[Quoted Text]
> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
> Norton which I now use on XP?
> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?


There are two different issues implied by your question:

1. Do you still need an antivirus program with Vista?

2. Should you use Norton Anti-Virus as your antivirus program.

The answer to question 1 is yes. Although there are many security
improvements in Vista, it does *not* contain an antivirus program and
you still need one.

The answer to question 2 is no. As far as I'm concerned, whether on
Vista or XP, Norton Antivirus is the single *worst* product on the
market. As a matter of fact, I wouldn't allow *anything* Norton on any
of my computers.

I recommend the freeware Avast! instead.

--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
David <david[ at ]invalid.com> 10.07.2007 03:07:11
Ken Blake, MVP wrote:
[Quoted Text]
> On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 15:32:25 +0100, "John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com>
> wrote:
>
>
>> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
>> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
>> Norton which I now use on XP?
>> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?
>>
>
>
> There are two different issues implied by your question:
>
> 1. Do you still need an antivirus program with Vista?
>
> 2. Should you use Norton Anti-Virus as your antivirus program.
>
> The answer to question 1 is yes. Although there are many security
> improvements in Vista, it does *not* contain an antivirus program and
> you still need one.
>
> The answer to question 2 is no. As far as I'm concerned, whether on
> Vista or XP, Norton Antivirus is the single *worst* product on the
> market. As a matter of fact, I wouldn't allow *anything* Norton on any
> of my computers.
>
> I recommend the freeware Avast! instead.
>
>
Wow, its hard to take anyone seriously when they make blanket statements
such as you have. You bias is unwarranted and you basically just come
off looking foolish when you say no one should use NAV. The only "pain"
I've had in loaded NIS is the lengthy installation time. For function
and "impact", it's running as nicely as reviews and my expectations
presumed it would. Could you please move your box down a block or
two? Your ranting about Norton is wearing thin.

Dave
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Mr. Arnold" <MR. Arnold[ at ]Arnold.com> 10.07.2007 03:23:34

"David" <david[ at ]invalid.com> wrote in message
news:qNednSk5V_t5ag_bnZ2dnUVZ_ternZ2d[ at ]comcast.com...
[Quoted Text]
> Ken Blake, MVP wrote:
>> On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 15:32:25 +0100, "John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
>>> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
>>> Norton which I now use on XP?
>>> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?
>>>
>>
>>
>> There are two different issues implied by your question:
>>
>> 1. Do you still need an antivirus program with Vista?
>>
>> 2. Should you use Norton Anti-Virus as your antivirus program.
>>
>> The answer to question 1 is yes. Although there are many security
>> improvements in Vista, it does *not* contain an antivirus program and
>> you still need one.
>>
>> The answer to question 2 is no. As far as I'm concerned, whether on
>> Vista or XP, Norton Antivirus is the single *worst* product on the
>> market. As a matter of fact, I wouldn't allow *anything* Norton on any
>> of my computers.
>>
>> I recommend the freeware Avast! instead.
>>
>>
> Wow, its hard to take anyone seriously when they make blanket statements
> such as you have. You bias is unwarranted and you basically just come off
> looking foolish when you say no one should use NAV. The only "pain" I've
> had in loaded NIS is the lengthy installation time. For function and
> "impact", it's running as nicely as reviews and my expectations presumed
> it would. Could you please move your box down a block or two? Your
> ranting about Norton is wearing thin.
>

Norton will never ever be installed on another machine I use. That thing
became Live Update toast and toasted itself on a routine basis, and I had to
reinstall the thing numerous times back in year 2001.

The machine with Vista pre installed came with Norton and the first thing I
did was uninstall the whole Norton nightmare suite.

I went to my solid as a rock NOD32.

Re: Vista v.s. Norton
The Sand <The.Sand.2thk43[ at ]no-mx.forums.net> 10.07.2007 03:24:27
I don't know about "need to" in regard to Norton but I have Norton 360 on two computers (one running Vista) and I love it... -- The Sand
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"David A. Spicer" <vista_ultimate_fan[ at ]hotmail.com> 10.07.2007 07:57:24
I'll second that! I'm currently running Norton 360 on my 32-bit notebook and
I plan to also install in on my 64-bit desktop. Both running Vista Ultimate.
--------------
Bugs are Sons of Glitches!



"The Sand" <The.Sand.2thk43[ at ]no-mx.forums.net> wrote in message
news:The.Sand.2thk43[ at ]no-mx.forums.net...
[Quoted Text]
>
> I don't know about "need to" in regard to Norton but I have Norton 360
> on two computers (one running Vista) and I love it...
>
>
> --
> The Sand

Vista v.s. Norton
"phypps" <nobody[ at ]nospam.com> 10.07.2007 10:16:10
I also agree.
I suspect most Norton bashers are basing their opinion on (much) older
versions of the software.
Maybe not unreasonably so either in all fairness, as in the past Norton was
a hog and could slow many a system to crawl from time to time.
But.... things have moved on.
Norton 360 is not an upgrade but a new program written with Vista in mind.
Vista itself handles "background" tasks much more intelligently with regard
to performance.
I have 360 on Vista Ultimate x64, MS updates on auto, and Media Centre
updates its TV guide as well.
Together they all work very nicely and I have to admit I hardly know they
are there.

Phypps



"David A. Spicer" <vista_ultimate_fan[ at ]hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:5FCB3AA7-1032-4F60-B27D-8DB8374DE981[ at ]microsoft.com...
[Quoted Text]
> I'll second that! I'm currently running Norton 360 on my 32-bit notebook
> and I plan to also install in on my 64-bit desktop. Both running Vista
> Ultimate.
> --------------
> Bugs are Sons of Glitches!
>
>
>
> "The Sand" <The.Sand.2thk43[ at ]no-mx.forums.net> wrote in message
> news:The.Sand.2thk43[ at ]no-mx.forums.net...
>>
>> I don't know about "need to" in regard to Norton but I have Norton 360
>> on two computers (one running Vista) and I love it...
>>
>>
>> --
>> The Sand
>


Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Victek" <Victek[ at ]xyz.com> 10.07.2007 16:32:30
[Quoted Text]
>I also agree.
> I suspect most Norton bashers are basing their opinion on (much) older
> versions of the software.
> Maybe not unreasonably so either in all fairness, as in the past Norton
> was a hog and could slow many a system to crawl from time to time.
> But.... things have moved on.
> Norton 360 is not an upgrade but a new program written with Vista in mind.
> Vista itself handles "background" tasks much more intelligently with
> regard to performance.
> I have 360 on Vista Ultimate x64, MS updates on auto, and Media Centre
> updates its TV guide as well.
> Together they all work very nicely and I have to admit I hardly know they
> are there.
>
> Phypps

Regarding Norton Internet Security (NIS), I've supported computers with NIS
2006 and NIS 2007 installed and they were painfully slow to boot. When the
systems were finally booted there was still a noticeable impact on
performance caused by NIS, and these were not "much older" versions of the
product. I've also experienced the problems with LiveUpdate breaking,
difficulty installing/uninstalling, etc. When things go wrong they can be
hard to straighten out, especially for novice users. This hasn't happened
often for me, but I haven't notice much improvement in recent versions with
regard to these issues. On the upside, I have heard good things about
Norton 360 - apparently it impacts performance much less. I haven't had a
chance to test it yet, but there's a mostly positive review at this site:

http://www.winsupersite.com/reviews/winvista_security_suites.asp


Re: Vista v.s. Norton
Bob 10.07.2007 19:00:03
OK, I have had Norton on my XP for several years with no problems. Now I
have a new system with Vista and McAfee installed. All was well until I
upgraded to Ultimate now I get all kinds of messages saying I'm not protected
ie., everything in McAfee seems to be disabled. Any thoughts as to how to
proceed?
--
BobS


"Victek" wrote:

[Quoted Text]
> >I also agree.
> > I suspect most Norton bashers are basing their opinion on (much) older
> > versions of the software.
> > Maybe not unreasonably so either in all fairness, as in the past Norton
> > was a hog and could slow many a system to crawl from time to time.
> > But.... things have moved on.
> > Norton 360 is not an upgrade but a new program written with Vista in mind.
> > Vista itself handles "background" tasks much more intelligently with
> > regard to performance.
> > I have 360 on Vista Ultimate x64, MS updates on auto, and Media Centre
> > updates its TV guide as well.
> > Together they all work very nicely and I have to admit I hardly know they
> > are there.
> >
> > Phypps
>
> Regarding Norton Internet Security (NIS), I've supported computers with NIS
> 2006 and NIS 2007 installed and they were painfully slow to boot. When the
> systems were finally booted there was still a noticeable impact on
> performance caused by NIS, and these were not "much older" versions of the
> product. I've also experienced the problems with LiveUpdate breaking,
> difficulty installing/uninstalling, etc. When things go wrong they can be
> hard to straighten out, especially for novice users. This hasn't happened
> often for me, but I haven't notice much improvement in recent versions with
> regard to these issues. On the upside, I have heard good things about
> Norton 360 - apparently it impacts performance much less. I haven't had a
> chance to test it yet, but there's a mostly positive review at this site:
>
> http://www.winsupersite.com/reviews/winvista_security_suites.asp
>
>
>
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Ken Blake" <kblake[ at ]this.is.an.invalid.domain> 11.07.2007 00:50:06
"David" <david[ at ]invalid.com> wrote in message
news:qNednSk5V_t5ag_bnZ2dnUVZ_ternZ2d[ at ]comcast.com...


[Quoted Text]
> Ken Blake, MVP wrote:

>> On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 15:32:25 +0100, "John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
>>> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
>>> Norton which I now use on XP?
>>> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?
>>>
>>
>>
>> There are two different issues implied by your question:
>>
>> 1. Do you still need an antivirus program with Vista?
>>
>> 2. Should you use Norton Anti-Virus as your antivirus program.
>>
>> The answer to question 1 is yes. Although there are many security
>> improvements in Vista, it does *not* contain an antivirus program and
>> you still need one.
>>
>> The answer to question 2 is no. As far as I'm concerned, whether on
>> Vista or XP, Norton Antivirus is the single *worst* product on the
>> market. As a matter of fact, I wouldn't allow *anything* Norton on any
>> of my computers.
>>
>> I recommend the freeware Avast! instead.
>>
>>
> Wow, its hard to take anyone seriously when they make blanket statements
> such as you have. You bias is unwarranted and you basically just come off
> looking foolish when you say no one should use NAV. The only "pain" I've
> had in loaded NIS is the lengthy installation time. For function and
> "impact", it's running as nicely as reviews and my expectations presumed
> it would. Could you please move your box down a block or two? Your
> ranting about Norton is wearing thin.


It's *my* opinion, and like all opinions, yes, it reflects my bias. My bias
is anti-Norton; yours is pro-Norton. I think my bias is warranted and yours
unwarranted ; you have the opposite opinion. That's fine. The OP is free to
take the opinion (and bias) of whichever of us (or neither) he prefers.


--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
Please reply to the newsgroup


Re: Vista v.s. Norton
David <david[ at ]invalid.com> 11.07.2007 02:09:43
Victek wrote:
[Quoted Text]
>>
>
> Regarding Norton Internet Security (NIS), I've supported computers
> with NIS 2006 and NIS 2007 installed and they were painfully slow to
> boot. When the systems were finally booted there was still a
> noticeable impact on performance caused by NIS, and these were not
> "much older" versions of the product. I've also experienced the
> problems with LiveUpdate breaking, difficulty installing/uninstalling,
> etc. When things go wrong they can be hard to straighten out,
> especially for novice users. This hasn't happened often for me, but I
> haven't notice much improvement in recent versions with regard to
> these issues. On the upside, I have heard good things about Norton
> 360 - apparently it impacts performance much less. I haven't had a
> chance to test it yet, but there's a mostly positive review at this site:
>
> http://www.winsupersite.com/reviews/winvista_security_suites.asp
>
>
I guarantee you have something else unrelated to Norton that is bogging
down your start up. What kinda processor, how much memory, etc? I've
installed NIS on two laptops and there is no discernible difference.
wait... i lied. I gain control of the desktop faster than when i run
the kludgy and FREE (which is what it is worth) AVG. I'm particular
enamored with McAfee either, which came on both our Vista laptops.

I"m not affiliated with Symantec--just a reasonably happy customer of
some of their products. No axe to grind, as does the "MVP" here. sigh.

Dave (NOT an "MVP")
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
David <david[ at ]invalid.com> 11.07.2007 02:18:50
Ken Blake wrote:
[Quoted Text]
> "David" <david[ at ]invalid.com> wrote in message
> news:qNednSk5V_t5ag_bnZ2dnUVZ_ternZ2d[ at ]comcast.com...
>
>
>
>> Ken Blake, MVP wrote:
>>
>
>
>>> On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 15:32:25 +0100, "John King" <jgnik[ at ]ntlworld.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> When Vista first came on the market the publicity made a lot of it's
>>>> security features. Does this mean that I can dispense with (for example)
>>>> Norton which I now use on XP?
>>>> Does Vista have regular updates of protection against new viruses e.t.c?
>>>>
>>>>
>>> There are two different issues implied by your question:
>>>
>>> 1. Do you still need an antivirus program with Vista?
>>>
>>> 2. Should you use Norton Anti-Virus as your antivirus program.
>>>
>>> The answer to question 1 is yes. Although there are many security
>>> improvements in Vista, it does *not* contain an antivirus program and
>>> you still need one.
>>>
>>> The answer to question 2 is no. As far as I'm concerned, whether on
>>> Vista or XP, Norton Antivirus is the single *worst* product on the
>>> market. As a matter of fact, I wouldn't allow *anything* Norton on any
>>> of my computers.
>>>
>>> I recommend the freeware Avast! instead.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> Wow, its hard to take anyone seriously when they make blanket statements
>> such as you have. You bias is unwarranted and you basically just come off
>> looking foolish when you say no one should use NAV. The only "pain" I've
>> had in loaded NIS is the lengthy installation time. For function and
>> "impact", it's running as nicely as reviews and my expectations presumed
>> it would. Could you please move your box down a block or two? Your
>> ranting about Norton is wearing thin.
>>
>
>
> It's *my* opinion, and like all opinions, yes, it reflects my bias. My bias
> is anti-Norton; yours is pro-Norton. I think my bias is warranted and yours
> unwarranted ; you have the opposite opinion. That's fine. The OP is free to
> take the opinion (and bias) of whichever of us (or neither) he prefers.
>
>
>
There is a difference between our opinions: you are blinded by your
hatred of NIS, despite the FACT that many people and organization
happily run it and prefer it to other internet security suites. I don't
make blanket statements that YOUR favorite anti virus program is without
any redeeming features. Next time, I humbly suggest you just tout the
positives of the program you feel most suited to the task, and skip the
total condemnation of a product that a number of other posters in this
thread have mentioned works quite well from them. (Which, BTW is
exactly what I expected, given the popularity and usefulness of NIS)

oh, and i have nothing against disagreement. :)

Dave
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
The Sand <The.Sand.2tjfh8[ at ]no-mx.forums.net> 11.07.2007 03:34:53
The reason I joined this forum is for tech help. One of the main reasons I like Norton is their tech help support. They are really nice and will stay on it until everything is resolved. To me that is important. -- The Sand
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Victek" <Victek[ at ]xyz.com> 11.07.2007 14:22:16


"Bob" <Bob[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:FA7C9D82-8421-4C03-8B88-8005503F0BC7[ at ]microsoft.com...
[Quoted Text]
> OK, I have had Norton on my XP for several years with no problems. Now I
> have a new system with Vista and McAfee installed. All was well until I
> upgraded to Ultimate now I get all kinds of messages saying I'm not
> protected
> ie., everything in McAfee seems to be disabled. Any thoughts as to how to
> proceed?
> --
> BobS

Try uninstalling McAffee, rebooting, and then reinstalling it.

Re: Vista v.s. Norton
"Arjan" <Arjan_sammani[ at ]mail.m-sammani.speedlinq.nl> 11.07.2007 17:49:05
"The Sand" <The.Sand.2tjfh8[ at ]no-mx.forums.net> schreef in bericht
news:The.Sand.2tjfh8[ at ]no-mx.forums.net...
[Quoted Text]
>
> The reason I joined this forum is for tech help. One of the main
> reasons I like Norton is their tech help support. They are really nice
> and will stay on it until everything is resolved. To me that is
> important.
>
>
> --
> The Sand

That's the reason why it costs more and more each year.
The same with Vista, you don't only pay for the OS itself, you pay for the
Help you can get by using Microsoft Helpdesk for example. Vista could be a
Lot cheaper if you were a Computer "specialist".
Just buy e.g. a RAM and place it into your computer, and you'll have the
rights to buy Win. Vista for a much lower price because they expect you to
solve your own Software/Hardware problems because you "are" a "specialist".
At least, that's what I read...
Anyway, it was a bit off topic

Re: Vista v.s. Norton
Dennis 13.07.2007 10:24:01

Well, I'm running NAV for quite a no. of years already. I don't have
problems with it. Yes, other's say your system is slower compared to a system
without one but the impact is not significant at all. The important thing of
having an antivirus is to protect yourself and degraded (a bit) performance
is a price of having protection. Since RAM price is becoming cheaper each
year then upgrade RAM to boost performance.

I have also tried AVG and McAffee products.
AVG Free - Good because its free and realtime "protection". Not too Good in
terms of protection.
McAfee - Bad on Performance. Slows my system down compared with NAV. Good in
terms of protection.

This is of course based on my experience.


"Victek" wrote:

[Quoted Text]
> >I also agree.
> > I suspect most Norton bashers are basing their opinion on (much) older
> > versions of the software.
> > Maybe not unreasonably so either in all fairness, as in the past Norton
> > was a hog and could slow many a system to crawl from time to time.
> > But.... things have moved on.
> > Norton 360 is not an upgrade but a new program written with Vista in mind.
> > Vista itself handles "background" tasks much more intelligently with
> > regard to performance.
> > I have 360 on Vista Ultimate x64, MS updates on auto, and Media Centre
> > updates its TV guide as well.
> > Together they all work very nicely and I have to admit I hardly know they
> > are there.
> >
> > Phypps
>
> Regarding Norton Internet Security (NIS), I've supported computers with NIS
> 2006 and NIS 2007 installed and they were painfully slow to boot. When the
> systems were finally booted there was still a noticeable impact on
> performance caused by NIS, and these were not "much older" versions of the
> product. I've also experienced the problems with LiveUpdate breaking,
> difficulty installing/uninstalling, etc. When things go wrong they can be
> hard to straighten out, especially for novice users. This hasn't happened
> often for me, but I haven't notice much improvement in recent versions with
> regard to these issues. On the upside, I have heard good things about
> Norton 360 - apparently it impacts performance much less. I haven't had a
> chance to test it yet, but there's a mostly positive review at this site:
>
> http://www.winsupersite.com/reviews/winvista_security_suites.asp
>
>
>
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
Crito <Crito.2tnv8e[ at ]no-mx.forums.net> 13.07.2007 13:10:03
Defender, UAC and the built-in firewall stops 99.99% of the threats I'm likely to encounter today. And for the other .01% it's much easier and safer to restore from backups than try to clean my system of the infection. I can do a complete restore of a Vista Business installation from DVD-RWs in about 20 minutes. No worrying about "did I get all of it?" or "did cleaning that file corrupt it?" In fact, it's not just my practice it's security industry best practice commonly referred to as the three Rs. After a system compromise you should always repartition, reformat and reinstall (or restore) from scratch. -- Crito
Re: Vista v.s. Norton
Bob 13.07.2007 18:46:04
Victek,
Based on many of the posts, I uninstalled only the Virus checking portion of
McAfee
and then installed 'Avast' and all is now well with the world. McAfee seems
to like this new arrangement. Thanks for you suggestion
--
BobS


"Victek" wrote:

[Quoted Text]
>
>
> "Bob" <Bob[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:FA7C9D82-8421-4C03-8B88-8005503F0BC7[ at ]microsoft.com...
> > OK, I have had Norton on my XP for several years with no problems. Now I
> > have a new system with Vista and McAfee installed. All was well until I
> > upgraded to Ultimate now I get all kinds of messages saying I'm not
> > protected
> > ie., everything in McAfee seems to be disabled. Any thoughts as to how to
> > proceed?
> > --
> > BobS
>
> Try uninstalling McAffee, rebooting, and then reinstalling it.
>
>

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