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| Security and Windows Vista A forum for discussion on security issues with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.security) |
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It works well on XP but MS has not made it available for public testing as of yet. MS should be starting Vista testing soon though.
-- Jason Windows Vista RC1 Build 5600 & 5728 MS Office 2007 B2TR "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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Thanks Jason for the reply...
I'm currently using WOC on XP Pro but have the Vista Beta2 disk and wanted to load it on top of XP. When I run the Vista Upgrade Advisory tool, it show compatibility issues with WOC and a couple of other devices and programs. I've uninstalled the devices and software except for WOC. Like you said, it is running great with XP. I was hoping MS would have a compatible version.... barny "Jason" wrote: It works well on XP but MS has not made it available for public testing as of yet. MS should be starting Vista testing soon though. -- Jason Windows Vista RC1 Build 5600 & 5728 MS Office 2007 B2TR "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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Thanks Jason for the reply,
I'm using WOC with XP Pro now but want to upgrade to Vista Beta2. The Windows Upgrade Advisory Tool shows compatibility issues with WOC and a couple of other programs and devices on my system. Was hoping MS would have a compatible version of WOC. -- barny "Jason" wrote: It works well on XP but MS has not made it available for public testing as of yet. MS should be starting Vista testing soon though. -- Jason Windows Vista RC1 Build 5600 & 5728 MS Office 2007 B2TR "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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OneCare is great - it is memory efficient, very lightweight, easy to use and
effective. I participated in all its beta's and then bought two sets of it in release. It is also very affordable, where one seat allows one to install it on three machines. It combines a good balance of essential system protections - from a firewall that replaces the Windows firewall in the Windows Security Center, which adds out-bound protections and rules that are very simple, on the fly, rules that one can easily apply, to system maintenance and backup. It is also much less "chatty" and in your face... as compared to many security suites. When used with IE 7 RC-1, or Vista, and Windows Defender, one can be reasonably sure that their system will remain safe and sound... provided they stay away from malicious sites, and do not do anything foolish [like running a machine in the context of a local machine administrator!!!]. It has only one behavior that I do not like - for laptops, or systems that one may not use all the time, it runs the maintenace tuneup upon startup. While the intent is good, it can get in the way of a user in a rush to use a system. This can be an annoyance on less powerful system that have a slower drive sub-system and less I/O - for example, on a laptop that is not used everyday, but brought into use for a meeting, or presentation. I'd give OneCare a shot and see how it works - I think most home, or SOHO users would like it. Other than that one minor behavior, OneCare is pretty awesome. "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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Lloyd,
Are you currently using WOC on Vista? -- barny "Lloyd" wrote: OneCare is great - it is memory efficient, very lightweight, easy to use and effective. I participated in all its beta's and then bought two sets of it in release. It is also very affordable, where one seat allows one to install it on three machines. It combines a good balance of essential system protections - from a firewall that replaces the Windows firewall in the Windows Security Center, which adds out-bound protections and rules that are very simple, on the fly, rules that one can easily apply, to system maintenance and backup. It is also much less "chatty" and in your face... as compared to many security suites. When used with IE 7 RC-1, or Vista, and Windows Defender, one can be reasonably sure that their system will remain safe and sound... provided they stay away from malicious sites, and do not do anything foolish [like running a machine in the context of a local machine administrator!!!]. It has only one behavior that I do not like - for laptops, or systems that one may not use all the time, it runs the maintenace tuneup upon startup. While the intent is good, it can get in the way of a user in a rush to use a system. This can be an annoyance on less powerful system that have a slower drive sub-system and less I/O - for example, on a laptop that is not used everyday, but brought into use for a meeting, or presentation. I'd give OneCare a shot and see how it works - I think most home, or SOHO users would like it. Other than that one minor behavior, OneCare is pretty awesome. "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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Lloyd,
Great plug; But; #1 It's not Vista compatible. Yet #2 Vista's firewall needs nothing- it's WAY better than xp-has Outbound; oh and the best firewall is a physical box;btw. #3 All of these services you speak of; are available; free of charge. Ahh, but it's your money--lol Jeff "Lloyd" wrote in message ... OneCare is great - it is memory efficient, very lightweight, easy to use and effective. I participated in all its beta's and then bought two sets of it in release. It is also very affordable, where one seat allows one to install it on three machines. It combines a good balance of essential system protections - from a firewall that replaces the Windows firewall in the Windows Security Center, which adds out-bound protections and rules that are very simple, on the fly, rules that one can easily apply, to system maintenance and backup. It is also much less "chatty" and in your face... as compared to many security suites. When used with IE 7 RC-1, or Vista, and Windows Defender, one can be reasonably sure that their system will remain safe and sound... provided they stay away from malicious sites, and do not do anything foolish [like running a machine in the context of a local machine administrator!!!]. It has only one behavior that I do not like - for laptops, or systems that one may not use all the time, it runs the maintenace tuneup upon startup. While the intent is good, it can get in the way of a user in a rush to use a system. This can be an annoyance on less powerful system that have a slower drive sub-system and less I/O - for example, on a laptop that is not used everyday, but brought into use for a meeting, or presentation. I'd give OneCare a shot and see how it works - I think most home, or SOHO users would like it. Other than that one minor behavior, OneCare is pretty awesome. "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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No, not yet, but I will be testing it very soon.
As you know, WOC for XP is not yet ported for any of Vista's evaluation builds available in any channel. I am running Trend's Suite 14, which is available for eval with Vista evaluations - build 14.56.1008 on Vista [build 5728]. It works fine, but left to default settings, it updates indiscreetly each 3 hours - doesn't take long, but if a user does not adjust it, it can be annoying. "barnyf" wrote in message ... Lloyd, Are you currently using WOC on Vista? -- barny "Lloyd" wrote: OneCare is great - it is memory efficient, very lightweight, easy to use and effective. I participated in all its beta's and then bought two sets of it in release. It is also very affordable, where one seat allows one to install it on three machines. It combines a good balance of essential system protections - from a firewall that replaces the Windows firewall in the Windows Security Center, which adds out-bound protections and rules that are very simple, on the fly, rules that one can easily apply, to system maintenance and backup. It is also much less "chatty" and in your face... as compared to many security suites. When used with IE 7 RC-1, or Vista, and Windows Defender, one can be reasonably sure that their system will remain safe and sound... provided they stay away from malicious sites, and do not do anything foolish [like running a machine in the context of a local machine administrator!!!]. It has only one behavior that I do not like - for laptops, or systems that one may not use all the time, it runs the maintenace tuneup upon startup. While the intent is good, it can get in the way of a user in a rush to use a system. This can be an annoyance on less powerful system that have a slower drive sub-system and less I/O - for example, on a laptop that is not used everyday, but brought into use for a meeting, or presentation. I'd give OneCare a shot and see how it works - I think most home, or SOHO users would like it. Other than that one minor behavior, OneCare is pretty awesome. "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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All true statements; however, using OneCare unifies the security and
maintenance suite for users who prefer not to have to find and manage many separate and possibly less well supported products. Further, the integration is very tight and the product is very easy to use. Also, one price provides protection for up to three computers in a home or small office. It's a good buy, for that reason and tracks with pricing in similar packs for student and teacher versions of office - meaning, there is some consideration for the realities facing families - lot's of kids with computers and little time to chase security and maintenance. Yes, Vista's firewall is very comprehensive - but... most users will never find it and only use its basic interface from inside the control panel or the security center. Very few will go to administrative tools and explore the much more capable and complex Vista firewall - which looks very much like ISA 2006 in that it treats every action as a publishing rule. It is great, but I suspect few home users will get too far into it. I do maintain that OneCare combines the balance of features and ease of use home users are looking for - without the memory and systems tax many users have experienced with Symantec's, or McAffee's products, for example. "Jeff" wrote in message ... Lloyd, Great plug; But; #1 It's not Vista compatible. Yet #2 Vista's firewall needs nothing- it's WAY better than xp-has Outbound; oh and the best firewall is a physical box;btw. #3 All of these services you speak of; are available; free of charge. Ahh, but it's your money--lol Jeff "Lloyd" wrote in message ... OneCare is great - it is memory efficient, very lightweight, easy to use and effective. I participated in all its beta's and then bought two sets of it in release. It is also very affordable, where one seat allows one to install it on three machines. It combines a good balance of essential system protections - from a firewall that replaces the Windows firewall in the Windows Security Center, which adds out-bound protections and rules that are very simple, on the fly, rules that one can easily apply, to system maintenance and backup. It is also much less "chatty" and in your face... as compared to many security suites. When used with IE 7 RC-1, or Vista, and Windows Defender, one can be reasonably sure that their system will remain safe and sound... provided they stay away from malicious sites, and do not do anything foolish [like running a machine in the context of a local machine administrator!!!]. It has only one behavior that I do not like - for laptops, or systems that one may not use all the time, it runs the maintenace tuneup upon startup. While the intent is good, it can get in the way of a user in a rush to use a system. This can be an annoyance on less powerful system that have a slower drive sub-system and less I/O - for example, on a laptop that is not used everyday, but brought into use for a meeting, or presentation. I'd give OneCare a shot and see how it works - I think most home, or SOHO users would like it. Other than that one minor behavior, OneCare is pretty awesome. "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |
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Please do not recommend products for vista that are incompatable with Vista.
The ocbeta team will send a message to beta testers when a vista compatable version becomes available. OC won't istall on vista, vista blocks the installation of incompatable or conflicting programs. Why don't you post your OC Pimp action on an xp newsgroup where it belongs. "Lloyd" wrote in message ... All true statements; however, using OneCare unifies the security and maintenance suite for users who prefer not to have to find and manage many separate and possibly less well supported products. Further, the integration is very tight and the product is very easy to use. Also, one price provides protection for up to three computers in a home or small office. It's a good buy, for that reason and tracks with pricing in similar packs for student and teacher versions of office - meaning, there is some consideration for the realities facing families - lot's of kids with computers and little time to chase security and maintenance. Yes, Vista's firewall is very comprehensive - but... most users will never find it and only use its basic interface from inside the control panel or the security center. Very few will go to administrative tools and explore the much more capable and complex Vista firewall - which looks very much like ISA 2006 in that it treats every action as a publishing rule. It is great, but I suspect few home users will get too far into it. I do maintain that OneCare combines the balance of features and ease of use home users are looking for - without the memory and systems tax many users have experienced with Symantec's, or McAffee's products, for example. "Jeff" wrote in message ... Lloyd, Great plug; But; #1 It's not Vista compatible. Yet #2 Vista's firewall needs nothing- it's WAY better than xp-has Outbound; oh and the best firewall is a physical box;btw. #3 All of these services you speak of; are available; free of charge. Ahh, but it's your money--lol Jeff "Lloyd" wrote in message ... OneCare is great - it is memory efficient, very lightweight, easy to use and effective. I participated in all its beta's and then bought two sets of it in release. It is also very affordable, where one seat allows one to install it on three machines. It combines a good balance of essential system protections - from a firewall that replaces the Windows firewall in the Windows Security Center, which adds out-bound protections and rules that are very simple, on the fly, rules that one can easily apply, to system maintenance and backup. It is also much less "chatty" and in your face... as compared to many security suites. When used with IE 7 RC-1, or Vista, and Windows Defender, one can be reasonably sure that their system will remain safe and sound... provided they stay away from malicious sites, and do not do anything foolish [like running a machine in the context of a local machine administrator!!!]. It has only one behavior that I do not like - for laptops, or systems that one may not use all the time, it runs the maintenace tuneup upon startup. While the intent is good, it can get in the way of a user in a rush to use a system. This can be an annoyance on less powerful system that have a slower drive sub-system and less I/O - for example, on a laptop that is not used everyday, but brought into use for a meeting, or presentation. I'd give OneCare a shot and see how it works - I think most home, or SOHO users would like it. Other than that one minor behavior, OneCare is pretty awesome. "barnyf" wrote in message ... I don't see where anyone has mentioned MS's own AV software...WOC.Live -- barny |