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Reply to: Anti-virus: Seriously serious thread
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Previously on "Anti-virus: Seriously serious thread"
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Just the windows built in thingy, plus Trusteer and BT protect. Occasionally run Malwarebytes. Think being ancient with diminished interest in porn is main protection.
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Possible to share some pics / screenshots? IT experts like Vetran, Markymark, BP can scrutinize them and help you with resolution.Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
More forgetful ladies. 
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Added to hostsOriginally posted by mudskipper View Post
More forgetful ladies. 
Redirect from spaces.slimspot again
127.0.0.1 spaces.slimspots.com
127.0.0.1 www .spaces.slimspots.com
We'll see...
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When it comes to dealing with serious viruses, the question should be:
WWAWMD?
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I haven't had a virus since the days of passing these or getting them off of top shelf magazines:
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All automatic, via IBM's Lifeboat bootable installer - google it - the IBM Open Client is no secret, basically RH. Lappy was a Thinkpad T410.Originally posted by SueEllen View PostWho installed it you, or some bod in IBM?
All the linux distros I've used have been faster than booting windows especially as they allow me to use cheap crappy hardware. (I'm currently writing this on an Ubuntu laptop)
TBF it's laudable what they are trying to do, just it's too slow and half the things don't work, i.e. need a Windows VM for vSphere, need Windows VM for Notes cos it's quicker, etc. It's mental because they are saying Windows is insecure etc, but let you run Windows in KVM.....
At current clientco it's BYOD and I have all I want on my MacBook Pro with zero issues apart from lack of space on the 512mb SSD.
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Who installed it you, or some bod in IBM?Originally posted by stek View PostNo it it was pukka Red Hat with mods and registered with a proper RHN subscription. We had Windows 7 originally and had to 'update' to OC.
It deffo slowed lappy down, and we were all Unix heads! Number one was disk access was lamentably slow, cured by SSD but not for contractors, permies only. The worst was RDP access and multiscreens, res wrong, appearing on wrong screen, and another was Notes, awful.
We all hated it. I'm not anti 'it', had OpenSolaris on my lappy in my Sun days that was fine apart from StarOffice but on the whole I think there's too many distros, libraries, I mean WTF is Cairo, Pango and cracklib?
All the linux distros I've used have been faster than booting windows especially as they allow me to use cheap crappy hardware. (I'm currently writing this on an Ubuntu laptop)
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Well, as said, Im not using it commercially but Linux mint doesnt slow my lappie down, it actaully boots quicker than a new lappie running windoz 8 (never upgraded it to 10 because I put Linux on it within 4 weeks of buying it) its cleaner too.Originally posted by stek View PostNo it it was pukka Red Hat with mods and registered with a proper RHN subscription. We had Windows 7 originally and had to 'update' to OC.
It deffo slowed lappy down, and we were all Unix heads! Number one was disk access was lamentably slow, cured by SSD but not for contractors, permies only. The worst was RDP access and multiscreens, res wrong, appearing on wrong screen, and another was Notes, awful.
We all hated it. I'm not anti 'it', had OpenSolaris on my lappy in my Sun days that was fine apart from StarOffice but on the whole I think there's too many distros, libraries, I mean WTF is Cairo, Pango and cracklib?
I dont have any influence over clients but I wont be going back to windoz for a non commercial perspective.
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Well, I guess you are a rich man now thanks to all those millions you received from African businessmen.Originally posted by SimonMac View PostI have oSX and I still have Avast Anti Virus, mainly because my NAS kept picking up (Wintel) viruses out of my junk mail folder when Time Machine backed up my Mac
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I have oSX and I still have Avast Anti Virus, mainly because my NAS kept picking up (Wintel) viruses out of my junk mail folder when Time Machine backed up my Mac
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Yep a couple of years ago I was on some dodgy download site, all of a sudden a load of popups appeared in quick succession, CPU fans started going hell for leather, any address I typed into browser got changed to some tulip site.Originally posted by VectraMan View PostIs it even possible to get a virus without explicitly downloading and installing something these days? It shouldn't be.
Did a scan which seemed to clean some bits up, but then I noticed when I went to my internet banking, there was an extra text box under the usual "select digits 1, 6, 9 from your memorable information" asking for the full phrase!!
I think it was a rootkit, think I had to rebuild it in the end as nothing would shift it.
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No it it was pukka Red Hat with mods and registered with a proper RHN subscription. We had Windows 7 originally and had to 'update' to OC.Originally posted by BolshieBastard View PostLOL! You mean a client was using Linux Mint v 17 for commercial purposes! Im not surprised they \ you had issues.
However, for non commercial use Id say its far superior to windoz. Sure, some of it is different to what you may be used to but to claim its a POS is, well, a POS in itself.
It deffo slowed lappy down, and we were all Unix heads! Number one was disk access was lamentably slow, cured by SSD but not for contractors, permies only. The worst was RDP access and multiscreens, res wrong, appearing on wrong screen, and another was Notes, awful.
We all hated it. I'm not anti 'it', had OpenSolaris on my lappy in my Sun days that was fine apart from StarOffice but on the whole I think there's too many distros, libraries, I mean WTF is Cairo, Pango and cracklib?
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LOL! You mean a client was using Linux Mint v 17 for commercial purposes! Im not surprised they \ you had issues.Originally posted by stek View PostWhen I was at IBM we had to have their Open Client Red Hat install on our laptops, what a total POS that was, ask Scruff, he was almost driven to suicide because of it!
I actually preferred Windows, and that's saying something.
However, for non commercial use Id say its far superior to windoz. Sure, some of it is different to what you may be used to but to claim its a POS is, well, a POS in itself.
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