As amazing as it sounds, I agree.Originally posted by: Amused
Yep. The few times I have been guilted into running an AV, it never hit on anything.
Just as with spyware, if you get a virus it's because of USER ERROR.
My machines have never had spyware or a virus.
Yes, which is precisely why proper computer procedures, actually give you better, more-complete protection than any run-time AV program running in the background ever could, since they are constantly in a state of being outdated, and behind-the-curve, in terms of the most virulent malware. But taking proper precautions, will prevent *any* virulent malware from even getting onto your machine.Originally posted by: Dopefiend
Oh, don't make me laugh, child. "Acquire better email skills"? Laughable.
Ever heard the saying "prevention is better than cure"?
How do you know that you don't have a zero-day virus on your machine, that you AV definitions don't cover yet? AV software is kind of like getting flu shots. Not getting near anyone with the flu, and keeping your bodies auto-immune response levels at peak, are far better options. (I don't get flu shots either.)Originally posted by: Dopefiend
Besides, how do you know that you haven't a trojan lurking somewhere on your machine dormant?
Hmm. Ditto?Originally posted by: Dopefiend
You speak of ignorance, which is amusingly ironic- ignorance must be bliss for you :laugh:
Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
Originally posted by: Dopefiend
Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
dude you have a lot of processes. people have way too much running on their computers at once.
edit: i have 21 processes, and that includes word, excel, outlook, and minesweeper.
WTF are you smoking? 36 processes is nothing. I have Opera, WS-FTP and Foobar open, and I'm at 53 processes :roll:
easy there...no need to be that abrasive when you are simply expression your own opinion. :roll:
and its still a lot of processes. what on earth do you have open? i do a lot of stuff on my computer, but no human can actively use more than 9-10 programs constantly. why would you need to run 2 instances of mspaint for more than a few seconds? edit: im talking about at home, not at work. i dont see why you need to have 5 instances of something open when you are just surfing the web and messing around. if you can provide a good enough example i will change my opinion.
i have nothing running in the background either. unless you guys are worried about spyware/viruses, then i dont see the point in running that either. i have 14 processes running when i have nothing open.
of course, i may use 40-50 if i absolutely needed to, but i just dont see what anyone would be doing at home on a saturday that needed 50 processes.
Blaster is a network worm. But an anti-virus is not a firewall. I would never recommend running on the open internet without a firewall, no moreso than recommending running around an infection ward at a hospital, with gaping open wounds on your skin. Because that's what it's like, to be on the public internet, without a firewall.Originally posted by: Dopefiend
Really. I'm sorry, you may be an Elite member but saying that receiving a virus is user error is either uninformed or stupid.
I suggest you go and read about the Blaster virus, and read about it's method of attack. No firewall, no antivirus, and one missed Windows Update and you're infected.
I would add "continuing to use known-buggy software that is maliciously exploitable" to that list, although that is also "user error". (I consider the continued use of IE/OE likewise to be "user error".)Originally posted by: Amused
Missing an update is user error.
I'm behind a router. If I wasn't I would use a firewall. A firewall is not an AV.
I reissue my challange:
Send me to one website that puts spyware or a virus on my machine without my permission.
To date, no one has been able to do this.
Virus infection and spyware infections are caused by carelessness and user error. Period.
And yet, there are no commercial AV packages on the market sold to end-users, that have "heuristics" capabilities in them worth anything. So that's not really a valid argument. vmyths.com has an article speculating that the AV companies do have that sort of technology, but they keep it in-house only, to aid them in automated detection of new strains, and generation of definition files. The biggest problem with heuristics is the sensitivity level. In order to not miss potential infections, you have to crank up the sensitivity, which results in too many false-positives for most end-users to deal with. You would need a trained tech to interpret the results in most cases. So that's another reason that heuristics don't really work well for an end-user product.Originally posted by: Phil
Heuristics.Originally posted by: myusername
You're going to catch it, because there are no virus def's yet?Originally posted by: Dopefiend
However, let's also assume that a virus is created that exploits a weakness in Windows that hasn't been patched yet. What are you going to do?
850,000 page faults in 20 minutes. who the fack designed this memory system?
Originally posted by: Mark R
850,000 page faults in 20 minutes. who the fack designed this memory system?
Not all page faults are hitting the page file. Windows can optimise file loading by 'mapping' files. Instead of loading the whole file into RAM when it is opened, windows has the ability to simply 'map' the file on the HD into virtual memory. This means that the file appears to be loaded in, but when part of it is accessed, it generates a page fault causing the relevant part of the file to be loaded in. Since the VM manger can bypass the file cache it reduces CPU and memory overhead.
Here's a screenshot of my system when I'm stressing it out. OMGWTFPAGEFAULT. Note how cidaemon has over 20 million pagefaults yet only uses 600 k. It's part of 'indexing service' and regularly scans the files on the HDD for indexing. It uses file mapping to load the files as efficiently as possible (.doc files can contain huge amounts of non-indexable data like images, mapping avoids having to load these unusable areas).
OTOH my 'WindowsApplication' probably has generated pagefile hits - mainly because it's working with a huge dataset, and needs access to the huge chunks of it at a time.
Originally posted by: mobobuff
Originally posted by: cavemanmoron
If he's running Windows 9x/ME his MSPaint might not support .JPEG by default.
arggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhh
It's okay! Just go here and they'll set you right.
Or you could go to OldVersion.com and download IrfanView, a very nice image editing/saving program.
Originally posted by: Phil
Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
dude you have a lot of processes. people have way too much running on their computers at once.
edit: i have 21 processes, and that includes word, excel, outlook, and minesweeper.
WTF are you smoking? 36 processes is nothing. I have Opera, WS-FTP and Foobar open, and I'm at 53 processes :roll:
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: cavemanmoron
Originally posted by: mobobuff
If he's running Windows 9x/ME his MSPaint might not support .JPEG by default.
arggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhh
You've GOT to be kidding me!
Come on, join the real world and get XP.