Because they don't update their antivirus and let it remain expired for half a year.
And then they wonder why it runs slow and has 200 processes running.
And then they wonder why it runs slow and has 200 processes running.
Your hard drive might have become corrupt. Heard of defragmenting/reformatting? ;POH-SHI- wrote:
My anti-virus has been expired eons ago. I guess some people are just sad cases.
My PC crashes occasionally because of the Hard-Drive though, 4 years-old with persistent usage :/
Well yes. Possibly corruptRokodo wrote:
Your hard drive might have become corrupt. Heard of defragmenting/reformatting? ;POH-SHI- wrote:
My anti-virus has been expired eons ago. I guess some people are just sad cases.
My PC crashes occasionally because of the Hard-Drive though, 4 years-old with persistent usage :/
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Also; get avast! Free - updates automatically and uses relatively few system resources by comparison to the paid software, especially Norton and McAfee. A SpyBot S&D cleanup once in a while never goes amiss either (although most 'spyware' you have on your computer is most likely just cookies).
Rokodo wrote:
omg a worthwhile post in off topic nu wai
Fix'd.Rokodo wrote:
Well for your next brand I recommendSeagate, Samsung oronly Western Digital.
Rokodo wrote:
@OH-SHI-
Well for your next brand I recommend Seagate, Samsung or Western Digital. It seems to be best to avoid Hitachi as their spindle heads tend to be more prone to failure in the current manufacturing time period, and they tend to fail sooner.
I'm currently running a Samsung internal and external of same model type - HD103SI 1TB. Very fast for a 5400RPM drive, and no problems as of yet (about half a year's use of each).
I also have an internal WD Caviar Green of 2TB capacity which is slow to access due to its power saving features, but I am sure it will last the course.
In the future I plan to shift my OS and programs to an SSD drive, once prices drop.
The ideal solution is to have a small capacity SSD for the main OS and your programs, and a 5400RPM drive for file storage as the slower spindle speed => longer life span over the now 'standard' higher RPM drives. However, SSDs are ludicrously expensive for the average consumer IMO.Rokodo wrote:
omg a worthwhile post in off topic nu wai
Rokodo wrote:
Your hard drive might have become corrupt. Heard of defragmenting/reformatting? ;P
Reformatting is a last measure that will (in most cases) have the same effect as getting rid of useless processes and services you don't use, and while defragmenting can speed things up, it won't stop your computer from randomly crashing.
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Also; get Microsoft Security Essentials - updates automatically and is better than most paid software, especially Norton and McAfee.A SpyBot S&D cleanup once in a while never goes amiss eitherSpyBot is useless these days, the only good reason to install it now is TeaTimer. Try Malwarebytes.
Rokodo wrote:
@OH-SHI-
Well for your next brand I recommendSeagate, Samsung orWestern Digital. It seems to be best to avoidHitachieveryone else as they tend to fail sooner.
The ideal solution is to have a small capacity SSD for the main OS and your programs, anda 5400RPM drive for file storage as the slower spindle speed => longer life span over the now 'standard' higher RPM drives.Bullshit. The Western Digital Caviar Black drives (7200 RPM) have the lowest failure rate on the consumer market.However, SSDs are ludicrously expensive for the average consumer IMO.HAHA DISREGARD THAT
lol...Loginer wrote:
*Massive Objection! spree*
Malwarebytes has more frequent database updates, and generally seems to find a lot of malware that Spybot misses. Malwarebytes is also a lot more effective against rogue security software. Of course, Spybot isn't literally useless, but Malwarebytes is superior.strager wrote:
Lolginer, I'm interested in why you say Spybot is deprecated. (Yes, TeaTimer is pretty useful.)
kktyLoginer wrote:
Malwarebytes has more frequent database updates, and generally seems to find a lot of malware that Spybot misses. Malwarebytes is also a lot more effective against rogue security software. Of course, Spybot isn't literally useless, but Malwarebytes is superior.strager wrote:
Lolginer, I'm interested in why you say Spybot is deprecated. (Yes, TeaTimer is pretty useful.)
Davidz123 wrote:
Norton Anti-Virus here.
Got expired from the last year. Recently found a keygen to crack a new 3 years to it.
Maybe he's my mother. :UPokebis wrote:
Why would you want to extend Norton's life?
Well, not everything would be installed on the SSD. I would personally just install the OS and a few key programs, like Photoshop, on it and leave it open as a scratch disk.Rokodo wrote:
FaQ Loginer, like anyone wants a 40GB SSD. I'm using around 100GB for OS and programs.