• 0

AVG or Microsoft Security Essentials


Question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

I don't see why you'd switch to MSE, it has relatively mediocre detection rates, relatively slow scanning speeds, and generally likes suck up about ~70MB of RAM which is not particularly "light". There are much better free clients out there... Avast is certainly one of them.

And, in fact, AVG 2012 appears to have one the highest overall detection rates of any free antivirus.

  • 0

Updates do not have to come through WU. They can come through the application too. See the big green "Update" button? Click it ;)

To take it even further I use a batch file that is run by the Windows Task Scheduler once a day that will update the virus signatures :)


@echo off
cd C:\Program Files\Microsoft Security Client\Antimalware
start /min MpCmdRun.exe -SignatureUpdate
[/CODE]

  • 0

I very much liked AVGs firewall when I used it. So I'd say it depends on whether or not you use XP (which AVG has been known to destroy hahah, whoops) or like that firewall.

These guys claim AVG has many false positives though, and MSE gets very few - http://www.av-comparatives.org/

  • 0

MSE is much better as long as your windows is genuine. No antivirus at all is better than AVG. at least you'll save some resources used for nothing. MSE is lightweight on the pc and doesn't use that much resources.

  • 0

I very much liked AVGs firewall when I used it. So I'd say it depends on whether or not you use XP (which AVG has been known to destroy hahah, whoops) or like that firewall.

These guys claim AVG has many false positives though, and MSE gets very few - http://www.av-comparatives.org/

I'd rather have more false positives that I can un-quarantine, than have it miss real viruses.

  • 0

I very much liked AVGs firewall when I used it. So I'd say it depends on whether or not you use XP (which AVG has been known to destroy hahah, whoops) or like that firewall.

These guys claim AVG has many false positives though, and MSE gets very few - http://www.av-comparatives.org/

A quick few summary notes from this site too:

- MSE has the slowest on demand scanner, taking over twice as long as Avast.

- MSE has a detectection rate of about 92.1%, (infact, in the WORST 3 of the 15 products tested), though with very few false positives.

- Avira 10 has a detection rate of about 99.5%, (the highest) with few false positives

- Avast has the fastest ondemand scanner, rate of 97.2%, few false positives.

- McAffee was the only one not to pick up any false positives.

- Avast & Avira get full 3* ratings, MSE gets 2*.

Considering MSE also uses about 70MB of RAM, I'd say go for Avira or Avast's products. They're faster, and they give you better protection.

  • 0

MSE because it detected and a removed a difficult virus that AVG was incapable of seeing and Avira was incapable of removing. (anecdotal I know, but that's one reason I've stuck with it) Also it runs much lighter than AVG.

Avast is decent too though, would consider using them if I worried about viruses at all these days. :p

  • 0

I personally don't use any kind of anti-virus. You wanna stay virus-free, use common sense. Stay away from porn sites, poker sites, don't click on everything that looks true such as "You just won an iPad, click here to claim your prize". Things like that.

I scan my PC with Eset Online scanner and Malwarebytes at least twice a week and I have zero infections.

  • 0

I personally don't use any kind of anti-virus.

I scan my PC with Eset Online scanner and Malwarebytes at least twice a week and I have zero infections.

Bit of a contradiction there. You don't use anti virus but you scan at least twice a week with an anti virus.

Personally I use Avast, because when I have tried MSE, it bogged my PC down. Haven't used AVG in quite a few years.

  • 0

Had one woman who was using Avast, then upon it wanting her to renew it she thought she had to pay for it. So she uninstalled it and put AVG 2012 on it. She said, her computer was so bad she couldn't even use it. It bogged it down that much. I can believe it. AVG 2011 / 2012 is TERRIBLE!

My local competitor here in town loves AVG. In the window of his store he is selling OLD P4 systems / AMD XP / Celeron systems with 512 megs of ram and AVG 2012. WTF! How can that run good!? Those machines would have ZERO ram left upon startup.

  • Like 2
  • 0

Had one woman who was using Avast, then upon it wanting her to renew it she thought she had to pay for it. So she uninstalled it and put AVG 2012 on it. She said, her computer was so bad she couldn't even use it. It bogged it down that much. I can believe it. AVG 2011 / 2012 is TERRIBLE!

My local competitor here in town loves AVG. In the window of his store he is selling OLD P4 systems / AMD XP / Celeron systems with 512 megs of ram and AVG 2012. WTF! How can that run good!? Those machines would have ZERO ram left upon startup.

these machines (the ones you describe) in my hometown are my money makers...I always remove crapafee/AVG from a customers' machine, especially on low ram systems...after removal, they (the machines) are way faster than when I first press the power on button for the first time. I think that people see the avg, and think "oh well, I've got an antivirus....that's all that matters. now, how 'bout some pron?) Nearly every machine that has came through my door has either had AVG or crapafee....or Norton! That's always the FIRST thing to go...and I always replace them with MSE due to the fact that it's released by microsoft, and since windows is made by microsoft, it often makes more sense to use it....because people always think, "since windows is made by microsoft, and they released an anti-virus, and it's their fault (microsoft's, of course) that I have a virus to begin with, why not let them fix it and then let my computer be protected by an antivirus that microsoft made..." sort of like microsoft knew there'd be viruses, then they made an antivirus to fix their flaws....put it this way, I've never had a machine come back due to infection....whereas, I've worked on several thousand machines whose owner thought they were protected with AVG or Avast....or crapafee or norton....and they tend to have severe problems with malware. I worked on a pc at a restaurant (the cash-register) that was so infected that it would take around 20 minutes to boot up...ended up taking out AVG, replacing it with MSE...and to this day, they've never called me back. I'm not talking about 512MB ram, either....this particular machine had 8GB of ram, and yet I could take my oldest pentium (pentium II slot), and it would smoke that machine with all of that ram. So yeah, without question...it's MSE all the way for me!

  • 0

Bit of a contradiction there. You don't use anti virus but you scan at least twice a week with an anti virus.

Personally I use Avast, because when I have tried MSE, it bogged my PC down. Haven't used AVG in quite a few years.

Not a contradiction at all. Just because I don't use anti-virus doesn't mean I don't take care of my system and check it once in a while. Sometimes you go to the doctor to do a full checkup just to be sure you are OK, right? Same thing here.

It's called: Preventive Maintenance.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • BleachBit 6.0.1 Beta by Razvan Serea When your computer is getting full, BleachBit quickly frees disk space. When your information is only your business, BleachBit guards your privacy. With BleachBit you can free cache, delete cookies, clear Internet history, shred temporary files, delete logs, and discard junk you didn't know was there. Designed for Linux and Windows systems, it wipes clean thousands of applications including Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome, Opera, Safari, and more. Beyond simply deleting files, BleachBit includes advanced features such as shredding files to prevent recovery, wiping free disk space to hide traces of files deleted by other applications, and vacuuming Firefox to make it faster. Better than free, BleachBit is open source. BleachBit has many useful features: Delete your private files so completely that "even God can't read them" according to South Carolina Representative Trey Gowdy. Simple operation: read the descriptions, check the boxes you want, click preview, and click delete. Multi-platform: Linux and Windows Free of charge and no money trail Free to share, learn, and modify (open source) No adware, spyware, malware, browser toolbars, or "value-added software" Translated to 64 languages besides American English Shred files to hide their contents and prevent data recovery Shred any file (such as a spreadsheet on your desktop) Overwrite free disk space to hide previously deleted files Portable app for Windows: run without installation Command line interface for scripting and automation CleanerML allows anyone to write a new cleaner using XML Automatically import and update winapp2.ini cleaner files (a separate download) giving Windows users access to 2500+ additional cleaners Frequent software updates with new features Going beyond standard deletion of files, BleachBit has several advanced cleaners: Clear the memory and swap on Linux Delete broken shortcuts on Linux Delete the Firefox URL history without deleting the whole file—with optional shredding Delete Linux localizations: delete languages you don't use. More powerful than localepurge and available on more Linux distributions. Clean APT for Debian, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and Linux Mint Find widely-scattered junk such as Thumbs.db and .DS_Store files. Execute yum clean for CentOS, Fedora, and Red Hat to remove cached package data Delete Windows registry keys—often where MRU (most recently used) lists are stored Delete the OpenOffice.org recent documents list without deleting the whole Common.xcu file Overwrite free disk space to hide previously files Vacuum Firefox, Google Chrome, Liferea, Thunderbird, and Yum databases: shrink files without removing data to save space and improve speed Surgically remove private information from .ini and JSON configuration files and SQLite3 databases without deleting the whole file Overwrite data in SQLite3 before deleting it to prevent recovery (optional) BleachBit 6.0.1 Beta release notes: BleachBit 6.0.1 beta is now available for testing. This maintenance-focused release includes bug fixes, updated translations, and a range of safe enhancements. This release fixes a Windows security issue that could allow arbitrary file deletion during privileged cleaning (reported by Zeze with TeamT5). It also adds new cleaners (including a DNS cache cleaner, Claude Code, and Visual Studio Code forks), support for multiple Chrome and Edge profiles, new deep scan options for developer directories like node_modules and venv, and safer, faster file shredding. All Platforms Added cleaners for Claude Code, DNS cache, and many Visual Studio Code forks. Added support for multiple Chrome and Edge profiles. Chrome can now clean downloaded AI models. Deep Scan can optionally remove venv, __pycache__, node_modules, and .angular directories. Deep Scan is faster by skipping directories on the keep list. File shredding is safer, faster, and leaves fewer recoverable traces. Improved handling of cookies, symlinks, Unicode filenames, external processes, and configuration files. Improved Expert Mode warnings and long warning dialogs. Fixed crashes related to cleaner detection, invalid Unicode, and malformed cleaner data. Clipboard is now cleared automatically after shredding files via paste operations. Linux Added AppImage support. Added cleaners for Visual Studio Code, Codeium, Librewolf (.deb), Transmission (Flatpak), and Profanity. Improved Linux trash detection, including Snap-installed applications and mounted drives. Fixed Wayland root CLI issues and several Snap-related problems. Improved package dependencies, AppStream metadata, and desktop file handling. Fixed startup crashes when Python Requests is unavailable. Windows Fixed a security vulnerability that could allow arbitrary file deletion when cleaning with elevated privileges. Added %WindowsSystem% variable support. Improved clipboard clearing using native Windows APIs. Improved installer experience on unsupported Windows versions. Reduced installer size and improved application robustness. Fixed Unicode handling, filename anonymization, Git revision reporting, and splash screen stability. [full release notes] Download: BleachBit 6.0 | Portable | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) View: BleachBit Home page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • DriversCloud 12.1.6 by Razvan Serea With DriversCloud (formerly My-Config.com), you can explore your computer easily, safely and free. The application quickly scans your PC and identifies the hardware and software components. DriversCloud then establishes a list of the different drivers compatible with your OS and hardware. Download the drivers needed for the proper functioning of your computer. To detect your drivers, DriversCloud also displays a detailed summary of your hardware and software configuration, analyzes your BSOD, monitors in real-time your PC voltages and temperatures and lets you share your configuration online. Once the hardware components have been detected, you will be able to obtain with just a few clicks the latest drivers corresponding to the identified hardware. You can record your configuration on the site for free, and can get the corresponding URL to post the configuration to technical forums, e-mail and social networks. You can also download the detection result (the configuration) as a PDF file. To protect the user's privacy and data confidentiality, a 4-level confidentiality system was created that filters the XML marks and gives control to the user. The default level can be modified in the preferences. Using the maximum level will prevent the user from publishing his configuration and generating a corresponding PDF file. In non-connected mode, each XML configuration is stored on the server for one day (for practical reasons). However, you are given the opportunity to manually delete it. Created in 2004, and continually improved, My-Config.com has established itself on the web as a free service to PC users running Windows and Linux operating systems. The service is designed to work with the most common Internet browsers (Edge, Firefox, Chrome, Safari). Download: DriversCloud 64-bit | 20.0 MB (Freeware) Download: DriversCloud 32-bit | 18.9 MB Link: DriversCloud Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Contributor
      MarkHughes4096 went up a rank
      Contributor
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      516
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      193
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      96
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!