Karpersky Anti-Virus and others!

Who has it?

I've been using Kaspersky for about a month now. Got rid of the claws Symantec NAV had on me for a couple of years. I have tried AVG and Avast before, but decided by using KAV following suggestions of friends. I think AVG is lighter than Avast. Anyway, I'd better stop trying after spending couple of bucks to find heaven. My first opinion of KAV is that it's way too friendly and works well doing the job. I like it. Finds things Norton never ever imagined was in my machine. What about you guys? I'd like you to share your experience with me. C'mon! Hit this keyboard of yours!  
14,875 views 19 replies
Reply #1 Top
You can keep your avg,avast and krapsky i'm a norton fanboy *hugs his norton products and talks in a smeagol voice* "my precioussssssss"

OK seriously i'll end up getting rid of NAV as soon as they stop my re-installs from updating when the new subs is nearly due ,i have tried avast and i agree it is a system hog i found it slower than NAV and it inteferred with webpage loading etc where NAV did not,have'nt tried AVG i'll give that a blast on the next re-install mwaaaaaaaa,Krapsky has done quite well in the battle of the AV's apps if any of the comparisons are to go by
Reply #2 Top
I've only tried Norton and Norman. Norton has generally been fine, but I've had some issues with it. And this issues has not very easy to solve. They had me pinned to google for hours and days finding a solution for it.

Norman seem to just work. All though the UI is butt ugly. But then again, I rarly have to see it's UI anyway. Just ticks along in the background.
Reply #3 Top
I've been using Kaspersky since late last year & am very happy with it's small footprint, frequent updates and high effectiveness. My father used to call me pretty often with with Norton problems. When Norton expired, I migrated him to Kaspersky & he hasn't called with a-v probs since
Reply #4 Top
I was a long time Norton user. When I had the opportunity to use something different and uninstall Norton, I was amazed.

The response of my computer increased dramatically. It booted faster, and several other improvements.

I have been using Trend Micro for a while now and have found it to be great.

  
Reply #5 Top

Got rid of the claws Symantec NAV had on me for a couple of years.

Good move....[I did the same not too long ago].

Now using Bit Defender...

only negative is it keeps losing the tray icon [in Litestep]...not a biggie...

And it BSOD'd a few times till Spybot was uninstalled...that fixed it.

BTW....I found out what to do after actually TALKING [irc] with a real life human....in their online help.  [I bet THAT wouldn't happen with Norton]...

So...it's Bit Defender 9 Standard for me...

Reply #6 Top
Stange for me I'm using AVAST (the free home version) & it's not a system hog on my machine for what it worth - maybe the PAID version does this...it finds plenty of V's too with a great simple UI. I've tried AVG & liked it as well, but I just didn't want two AV on my system at once. Never tried BD9 or Trend Micro but MOST AV sofware (I say MOST) seem to have some kind of shareware/trail version so you can experiment to see if it fits your needs & system; one thing I've noticed by feedback from other users on this issue - no ONE/SINGLE AV works for all!
Reply #7 Top
Yeah George, that's just it: no AV is perfect 'cuz what is perfect is utopic, and utopic is not real, anyway! Never tried BD9, and Trend Micro was a long time ago. Just like u Island, I was a Norton fan. Used SystemWorks mostly, when it seemed to work. Nowadays it's just a giant system hog. Even Symantec, as far as I know, has separated it from NAV in the pack.

Jafo has a good discussion that goes on and on about Norton problems https://forums.wincustomize.com/?forumid=70&aid=81379#948745 which is very clarifying.

I'm using AVAST (the free home version) & it's not a system hog on my machine


Frankly I was not lucky with it, George. Think it slows down, specially my incoming e-mail. Dunno if you have the same issue. But it's a nice one. Nice UI and all.

Thank you guys. Let's discuss more. That's what this forum is all about!   
Reply #8 Top
Nice step.

I have done it a few months ago. Currently using NOD32.
Reply #9 Top
Not to beat a dead horse beto666, but I'm using an AMD/CPU & Abit MB - are you using Intel??? Just curious & wondering if the hardware one uses has a profound effect?? Also I've heard alot of good things about NOD32 as PU BX states - haven't tried it though.
Reply #10 Top
BitDefender for me..
Reply #11 Top
Over time I have tried them all. I have happily settled on BitDefender.
Reply #12 Top
are you using Intel???


Yeah, around here inside the box there's an Intel heart beating, although I have already tried AMD 3200+ 64 and liked it a lot in my notebook. But Avast still crawled a bit.

BitDefender for me..


I have happily settled on BitDefender.


Now using Bit Defender...


There seems to be a lot of Defenders defenders!   Never tried that one though, neither know any about NOD32. Can you tell me of the UI and e-mail scanning speed and stuff?

Thanx again friends.
Reply #13 Top
I am a systems administrator for a small office and run a home-based PC repair/consulting service. I've worked on myriad machines running a great number of the AV offerings out there. So, I am at least somewhat familiar with how they work, the good and the bad, memory demands, etc. For years I used Norton AV and then Symantec Corp. edition but finally got rid of Norton/Symantec and went to Kaspersky. Norton has become an unruly bloated program and its performance has lagged behind many of the others, sad to say. I now recommend everyone switch to Kaspersky for various reasons, the main one being its undisputed superior security/performance. Kaspersky also has excellent FREE support; both from the company and their online forum.

For a recent news article see here: Why popular antivirus apps 'do not work'
Reply #14 Top
Hey Hapkido,

Do you study Hapkido?
Reply #15 Top
Not any longer since my Sensei is no longer alive. I began the study of Classical Martial Arts back in 1963. And throughout the following years I studied Shoto Kai, Shoto Kan, Hokoru Jujitsu, Aikdo, Tai Kwan Do and finally Korean Hapkido. Finding any place that actually teaches Classical Martial Arts is a difficult quest indeed, at least it was in my experience. Most people IF they do find a dojo that teaches the "old way" wouldn't join or they wouldn't last very long. It is far too strict and grueling for those of Western upbringing.

I thoroughly enjoyed studying Hapkido since it had elements of both Japanese Jujitsu and Aikido. Sorry for going way off topic!!
Reply #17 Top
Sorry for going way off topic!!


Never mind. It's only Rock'n'Roll but I like it!     

the main one being its undisputed superior security/performance


Agree with you. I like the way it works in the backgraound. Not to mention the performance. Way to go, Hapkido.
Reply #18 Top
Kaspersky- Award-winning antivirus software protects your PC from viruses, Trojans, spyware, rootkits and other malicious programs.
Reply #19 Top
Hi,

I use windows live onecare because it automatically updates all my microsoft software. I also own microsoft stock. I don;t have any complaints with it.