petef Posted July 27, 2008 Author Posted July 27, 2008 The bottom line is most people allow these worst cases to be installed or have no protection. Once educated they learn. If not charge them a bucket of money. Then they will listen and be educated. No pain. No gain. I agree because many of my customers seem to learn. My happiest customers are the ones where I do the cleaning on-site and have the opportunity to educate them as the scans are being performed. The ones that tend to get re-infected are more typically the ones who just drop off the computer for cleaning and don't get the benefit of 30 to 60 minutes of ediucation on how to keep safe. The worse case is when they have a house full of young computer users and multiple user accounts on the PC. I can eduucate mom or dad but it so difficult to get the same education to all the family members. This new breed of malware is going to decrease the number of customers I can educate if I can no longer perform the scan onsite due to having to slave the drive for cleaning. That's not a good thing. Again this is another reason why the new breed of anti-malware products needs to be a bootable CD that runs in another OS such as Linux to perform the scans and delete the nasty files and registry entries. ---pete--- Quote
RandyL Posted July 27, 2008 Posted July 27, 2008 It's almost always the kids isn't it pete? Charge them the bucket load and tell them it was the kids fault. Maybe then the parents will do the job of parenting and monitor their usuage instead of using the computer as a baby sitter so they can do do their own thing. It might also be a good time to teach the kids to pay for things instead of trying to get something for nothing. Stuff like free music or cool games isn't free once the kid loses the allowance for 3 years to pay for the cleanup. And if the parents lose 6 months of their pay to pay off the law suit I'll bet they pay much more attention to their kids. I have very little sympathy after the first time. That's why I tell people on this forum to dump the crap for good or we can't help them. Quote We are all members helping other members. Please return here where you may be able to help someone else. After all, no one knows everything and you may have the answer that someone needs.Get help with computer problems. Join Free PC Help here Donations are welcome. Read Here
Tony D Posted July 27, 2008 Posted July 27, 2008 To answer Pete's question on how long it takes to scan a USB connected drive: That of course depends on the quantitiy of data and the speed of the drive. I think typically, you're looking at about an hour with USB 2. I can't say for sure, but I think it may be faster than connecting as an actual slave. Quote Need help with your computer problems? Then why not join Free PC Help. Register here If Free PC Help has helped you then please consider a donation. Click here We are all members helping other members.Please return here where you may be able to help someone else.After all, no one knows everything and you may have the answer that someone needs.
petef Posted July 27, 2008 Author Posted July 27, 2008 To answer Pete's question on how long it takes to scan a USB connected drive: That of course depends on the quantitiy of data and the speed of the drive. I think typically, you're looking at about an hour with USB 2. I can't say for sure, but I think it may be faster than connecting as an actual slave. Reason I asked is that a scan via USB drive should be considerably slower than a slaved drive and I was wondering about how much slower it actualy is. If you say 1 hour to scan a typical hard drive, I think that is quite reasonalble because the typical internal hard drive I encounter takes about 35 to 60 minutes to perform a complete scan using SAS or NOD32. ---pete--- Quote
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