Yeah i know i wont be able to crossfire the card i have now with the one im looking for. It was the least system intensive, the most thorough, the most up to date, the last intrusive, the quickest updating, etc etc etcįile 130584498087.jpg - (18.56KB, 300x225, 14-998-048-TS.jpg ) >How did it compare to other anti-virus programs you may have used? I think a scan only ever picked up something that the proactive scanner missed twice. >Was it good at detecting viruses on its own? By this I'm asking if it alerted you when a virus was attempting to infect your machine, rather than you running the program manually and detecting a virus. >Have you ever used it to get rid of a virus, and if so, was it able to kill the virus when other anti-virus programs could not? >Did you pay for it? Was it free? Was it a free "trial version" that expired after a certain amount of time?
3324 >What's the best anti-virus software you've ever used? If you have a spyware problem, I heartily recommend it. Side note: I've gotten maybe ten pieces of spyware in the two years I've been using adblock, compared to 50+ per month beforehand. I've heard good things about MS's antivirus package since then, but I feel comfortable enough with a combination of Avast/noscript/adblock and safe browsing habits that I haven't felt a need to switch.
No particular reason for picking Avast at the time, if you didn't want to pirate nod32 or kaspersky, avg or avast were your best choices for free antivirus, and I liked the name more for avast. Then AOL switched it to McAfee and I dropped it for Avast. While it is possible to pirate Kaspersky, for those people who don't like to pirate things, this was a great deal. Back then, it was a slightly stripped down version of Kaspersky. So all I want is a phone to replace my current one that is more up to date and doesn't cost $600.īest free antivirus I ever used was AOL's free antivirus a bunch of years back. I've been on a month-to-month contract for over a year and it feels glorious. Plus I refuse to get a phone that puts me under a new contract. I don't really want to spend $40 for a Sam's membership I won't use except once.
If you go to Verizon through Costco or Sam's, Costco and Sam's forces them into better deals you won't find elsewhere and provide ridiculously high-quality customer support. If you go to a Verizon store or a booth at the mall, they'll bone you ever chance they get. Your best bet is going to a Verizon provider (note: not a Verizon store) like Costco or Sam's Club and talk about your options.