All the rants and raves I can think of?
Real life testing.
Published on November 28, 2008 By mickeko In Personal Computing

Purpose:

To see if I can do it. And well, people let me optimize their systems, I need to find a working solution so I don't need to help them too often.

Goal:

A clean smoothly running computer with a minimal amount of effort. The aim is to use as few different software components as possible.

How to achieve the goal:

Seems reasonable to use a freely available software suite. That way I don't need to have too many pieces of software running, and reduce risk of incompatibility issues.

The Hardware:

An old FujitsuSiemens computer. As I won't do any numbercrunching tests, specs are not really important. I'll just see how it feels to use it. Will it get slower over time? A real user don't do benchmarking.

The Software:

The OS is Windows XP Home (Swedish OEM). Newly installed.

Did some research, and decided on the following things to start:

I also installed Mozilla Firefox and some stardock software to make it look good. (What can I say, it's important to me... It's a "real life" test, so I want it to be as I would have it. Along with the OS, these are the only commercial components I'll use on the computer.)

The Results:

... Pending ...

The computer has been up and running for a few days now, and I've had no issues yet. It's not been used very much yet though.

Additional Comments:

I'll keep you posted on any issues that arise while using the computer (If any. No news is good news. ). I'll also post any changes I make to the installation of the computer.

Feel free to suggest things I should do. I'm not saying I'll do it, but I'll consider it, and perhaps someone else thinks it's a good thing to do if I don't. Keep in mind that this is a "minimal effort" attempt, so I'm not doing any advanced tweaking of any kind.

I'm also interested in how you'd go about doing the same test. What software would you choose? There are some altenative free software suites out there. Avast, AVG, Avira for antivirus. Glary Utilities for system maintenance. I don't really have a particular reason for choosing what I did, other than the fact that the IOBit PRO suite is really affordable at the moment (which isn't really a concern when running the free version ), and Comodo has a good rep.


Comments (Page 3)
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on Jan 03, 2009

Find out how safe you are. Try this awesome site that will try to find your PC. Mine is invisible.  https://www.grc.com/x/ne.dll?bh0bkyd2

on Jan 03, 2009

My Score. 


on Jan 03, 2009

Never assume you are too smart or to aware to get caught.

 

I don't.

 

I'm assuming that the firewall is more of a pain in the ass to use than the trojan is to clean off once every couple years when I actually get an infection from one of the very few widely distributed and not previously fixed exploits.  I'm assuming that the antivirus is more likely to delete something important than that virus is, that the antivirus itself is more damaging than the virus is to my system performance to start with, and that I might as well have the rare virus infestation instead and run antiviral software as needed instead of in perpetuity.

 

I saved myself hours of irritation in return for some occasional entertainment.

 

That's because I'm e-tarded and it's WMF.  Don't know what to blame that on.  KB912919.

 

Harmless, utterly harmless.  ActiveX was on a fuck off and die unless I trust your site basis long before that came out.  That and Java script were two primary exceptions to the low security setup I was running.  I never liked giving IE any more functionality than it absolutely needed.  I was also equally unhappy with the mandatory security level enforced by IE7, so it's since been dropped entirely for pissing me off.  I don't want a nanny, especially on that blocks popup windows when I'm the one trying to open them.

on Jan 03, 2009

Sole Soul
It's not so much an argument that a person needs AV as an argument that there is shit out there that is going to hit you regardless; also an argument that not everything is patched out before it hits the net.

on Jan 03, 2009

I have better odds of being in a car wreck than I do getting screwed beyond amusement by a computer virus.  So first I should avoid driving without having a car encased in foam.

on Jan 03, 2009

psychoak
I have better odds of being in a car wreck than I do getting screwed beyond amusement by a computer virus.  So first I should avoid driving without having a car encased in foam.

Whatever works for you. 

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