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Malwarebytes . . .

This is free or you can pay for a more feature-laden version. I use it in conjunction with Norton just to be on the safe side since I use my computer for professional work. Malwarebytes and Norton seem to co-exist with no problems. Usually I can find Norton really cheap if I look around for a sale.
 
 
Isn't Malwarebytes more an ad hoc adware/malware scanner than resident antivirus?

I had Comodo on my parents' system for a while, but they're on dial-up and the definition update files are so large that it couldn't ever get caught up.
 
I have no idea how far Malwarebyte's product line goes, but they have some for-pay versions with automatic scanning, etc. I discovered them when I had a Trojan virus of some sort and Norton would get part of it but not all of it - I could hardly do any work on the computer. Malwarebytes took care of it almost instantly, and since then I've kept using it.
 
Hate Norton

Hate McCaffee, Not crazy about Bitdefender either, their tech support is atrocious,  but it has a smaller footprint. At home am trying Kaspersky this year ,so far its the smallest footprint of all.

 

Heard there is a new one out called Esnet? or Enet? Supposed to be even smaller than Kas. My Kas runs out this spring so I will try to find it and try it out.
 
Avira Antivir Personal. It was/is highly rated, and it's free. There are updates daily, and there's a pay version with more features.

I also have Spybot Search and Destroy to help with spyware/malware, etc.
 
I'm behind an hardware firewall and my rule is "don't open it if you're not sure" so I feel quite safe, last time I got a "proper" virus was in 1997, more lately there were a couple of "trojans" that came in the mail and Avast home edition did a great job to keep them at bay, I run once in a while the Microsoft app for spyware and it always reports a clean system so Avast is sure doing a nice job.
I really liked Norton antivirus but it is a resource sucker and when the free subscription plan expired I simply uninstalled it.

Avast is more than enough, otherwise you could try Avira, everybody seem to say good things on it.

Also, if you can find it free, I suggest you the Trend Micro security suite with antivirus and firewall, both my banks gives it free to the customers so maybe you could find some institution that has an agreement with them too. It's very easy to use but on the "heavy" side of performance degradation
 
I have been using norton for many years with no problem. In the past 2 years our internet provide which is comcast, started providing it for us "free of charge" to download onto your computers. doesn't matter how many you have. You might look into what if any your internet provider provides.
Jon
 
I use Emisoft, formerly "A-squared". A wonderful anti-virus that is very pro-active, easy to use, and catches far more problems than most programs out there. There is a free version, but I spend the money for the upgrade which runs me about $12 for three months.
 
You really don't need the full Norton 360 product. All you need is the Norton Anti-Virus product. It's much cheaper.

Also it's much cheaper to just buy a new version of Norton when your current version of Notron expires.  The online renewal fee is higher than what a new Cd would cost.
 
Free Antivirus/Firewalls

I have several computers, and use Microsoft Security Essentials on a couple with no problems. It is completely hands off - it updates and scans w/o any fuss. The down side is that it doesn't give you as much control or feedback

Since I am a bit of a control freak, on one computer that has the internet connection coming in and then shares it with other computers, I use a combination of AVG Antivirus and Zone Alarm Firewall. The zone alarm firewall allows you to more carefully control access and will let you know if a program is trying to access the internet, so it is more interactive (and informative) than the Microsoft Security Essentials.

Microsoft Security Essentials:
http://www.microsoft.com/security_essentials/

AVG (Make sure you download the free version - not the free trial of the paid version):
http://free.avg.com/us-en/download-avg-anti-virus-free

Zone Alarm Free:
http://www.zonealarm.com/security/en-us/zonealarm-pc-security-free-firewall.htm

Trend Micro's Housecall also is free, and is web based - I like to use it from time to time as a sort of "second opinion." Since it is web based, you can just use it when you want to double check your system without loading a second virus software program that could result in degraded system performance.

http://housecall.trendmicro.com/

Joe
[this post was last edited: 1/19/2011-10:30]
 
Avira + AdAware. They're free for personal use, work as advertised and it's easy to disable the on-access scanning in Avira when you want it out of the way. Both Symantec and McAfee were system resource nightmares.
 
 

<span style="font-family: trebuchet ms,geneva; font-size: small;">When I was last using AVG, a program update on it caused Firefox to freeze repeatedly.  That's when I switched to Avast.  Could very well be the problem was reported and solved since then.</span>
 
Goodness! I didn't know there were so many different ones.

Norton is working fine, but it makes my older computer perform slower. In the past I had some problems with communicating with Norton. Haven't needed that the last few years, but it's time for something else.

I have AVG on my mini laptop, just wanted to try something different.

So far Avira and Avast seem the winners to me, but if somebody has something bad to say about one of them please stand up now or hold your peace forever... lol

Thanks for your opinion, it's a big help.

Louis
 
 

One of my computer-tech friends has recommended NOD32, she uses the paid version of it.  I don't know if there's a free version.

 

Her last recommendation to me for a free package was Avast ... but she does occasionally change her opinion.
 
I agree with Joe in Philly and MattL, Microsoft Security Essentials, I have found to be pretty good have had no issues and have been using on several laptops and pc's that I have within the family. I have had no issues with it and have been using it for quite a while. I will however look into AVG and Zone Alarm as Joe Recommends.
 

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