majortom1981 Posted June 5, 2008 Share Posted June 5, 2008 its very easy to break forget how now but it was done this was 6 years ago. IT has been patched up since then. I use it at work and if you use it with wsus,group policy , and a virus scan, and a firewall no hacker would even dare touch the machine ( this is how i have the comps set up). Also this setup is actually not that bad maintanance wise since everything is updated autimatically. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zirus Posted June 5, 2008 Share Posted June 5, 2008 I'm a network engineer for the school district where I live, and we've used Deep Freeze since I've worked there (and I've seen about 3 revisions of the software, all having common problems). Now, we're moving away from Deep freeze for several reasons: 1. its not as stable as you might think. Infinite reboots happen often. Like, when you thaw a computer and go to refreeze it for some reason it just goes into either a blue screen mode every time you boot up, or it just reboots constantly. 2. Its too difficult to manage Windows Updates with the software. I know it has the options to do that in the administrative versions, but thats difficult do manage. 3. In the deep freeze console that is distributed to Computer Techs managing it, since the remote computer listing is WINS based its not reliable. Some computers fail to show up for unknown reasons. 4. Computers get "permafroze". This is issue #1 really. When you push the key sequence to bring up the box occasionally the box fails to display. When it does, even if you do type in the password the computer may not completely thaw. 5. The software is difficult to update since it doesn't work well with vLANS (since its WINS / Broadcast based). 6. To solve the issue of bookmarks / My Documents the Enterprise (which is what we used) has the ability to make a "thawspace". This is a virtual hard drive that deep freeze creates on install. It is possible to use registry keys to move specific parts of the profile to the "thawspace". The thawspace has problems such as corruption. Since the data is stored in some sort of proprietary ISO (humor me if you will -- its actually some sort of .dsk file) if the file becomes corrupt there is no way to recover the data. 7. In the older versions of the software they will freeze your external hard drives. 8. Computers can become "semi-froze" if you try to build an image of a frozen machine and restore the image to another computer (using something like Ghost, PartImage, or Acronis). This leads to serious difficulty making the image usable. 9. An image made from a frozen computer with a thawspace is HUGE. 10. Since the thawspace is set by the Administrator if the deep freeze build's thawspace is larger than the hard drive, Deep freeze shrinks the thawspace to accommodate the system. This is good, however it is extremely unstable. 11. It is next to impossible to put AntiVirus software on the computer reliably. (it is possible for people to delete it if you put it in a location that it can be updated). 12. There are cracks for some of the older versions. (can be found easily through google -- The other techs and myself started using them actually it was faster than calling the Help Desk for a token to thaw a computer). 13. There are Viruses which infect the boot sector. If a virus infects C -- you're ok. However if the build of deep freeze has a thawspace the virus will also infect that. Since the thawspace doesn't reset itself the virus reactivates on the system every time its booted up and the thawspace initalized. If you have network drives mapping to this computer those also become infected. Then other computers open those drives and become infected themselves. (You see where this is going...) We had to re-image every single machine at a high school here due to this problem over Christmas break. There ya go... 13 reasons why deep freeze sucks -- coming from a systems admin at a k-12 school district. Although don't get me wrong, it could have been managed better and some of these problems could have been avoided, but the problem remains. Again, don't take that the wrong way... I use it at home. Its on my little bro's PC. The software outlived the hardware (the PSU died...). Deep freeze is really great when it decides to work right. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vladmir Posted June 8, 2008 Share Posted June 8, 2008 I know, i have asked the same question myself. I myself havent installed it on my pc, but it is installed on my brothers laptop, because he dosent practice 'safe hex'. He visits all the pron sites you can think of, and more, and will click on basically anthing that catches his fancy. Hey, he is an adult, he can do what he wants to, fine by me. The problem is, i used to have to fix it every month. Got sick of doing that, installed Deep Freeze, and BAM, no more hassle for me. Now, specifically for the bookmarks issue. Dude, use firefox portable. So simple! i do. The install it on your unfrozen partition, since its portable, all the stuff, including the profiles is stored on the SAME drive. You see, even if you install firefox on D: drive instead of the C: drive which has your main OS (for example) still, the %APPDATA% folder will have a firefox folder. This problem is solved with firefox portable. every extension works. you can download it here: http://portableapps.com/apps/internet/firefox_portable tell me what you think. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sweetsam Posted September 15, 2008 Share Posted September 15, 2008 I have deep freeze installed on my home computer used by everyone at home. The operating system is XP Pro. I used powertoys to relocate the my documents, favorites and all the special folders windows has. Firefox profile folder is setup in D Drive where all the data resides. Everyone has their own directory on D Drive. The hard drive is frozen. I thaw it when I find time to update windows and security software. It used to be such a headache having to fix it every time somebody messes it up. Now no problems whatsoever. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HawkMan Posted September 15, 2008 Share Posted September 15, 2008 I have deep freeze installed on my home computer used by everyone at home. The operating system is XP Pro. I used powertoys to relocate the my documents, favorites and all the special folders windows has. Firefox profile folder is setup in D Drive where all the data resides. Everyone has their own directory on D Drive. The hard drive is frozen. I thaw it when I find time to update windows and security software. It used to be such a headache having to fix it every time somebody messes it up. Now no problems whatsoever. well that doesn't defeat the purpose at all... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
.Kompressor Posted September 15, 2008 Share Posted September 15, 2008 It's like System Restore on Steroids. it's very good...and probably good to revert messed up systems with spyware/viruses/malware etc to safe state. here's another one Rollback RX http://www.horizondatasys.com/169614.ihtml Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sweetsam Posted September 15, 2008 Share Posted September 15, 2008 I guess you don't want your work saved. But I do and hence the setup. well that doesn't defeat the purpose at all... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skulltrail-old Posted September 20, 2008 Share Posted September 20, 2008 Lol. In my high school we receive HP tablets for everyday work, and each laptop distributed has DeepFreeze installed on it. It's pretty kewl especially when doing things you wouldn't want the school to know about, just restart and everything is gone. ;) But in all seriousness, it is great software. My Rating: 9/10 EDIT: I'm going to get a copy of DeepFreeze soon, whether from school (I'm a student technician, have access to such software and I'll be sure to ask before I take. Our principal gave me a copy of PS as a reward for my hard work :D) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tom01 Posted September 20, 2008 Share Posted September 20, 2008 Whats the difference between this and Comodo DiskShield? Apart from price. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skulltrail-old Posted September 21, 2008 Share Posted September 21, 2008 Whats the difference between this and Comodo DiskShield? Apart from price. Link me to w.e. the hell Comodo DiskShield is and I'll tell you the difference. I tried searching it but to no avail; Comodo is well known for their Firewalls. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dc'1 Posted September 21, 2008 Share Posted September 21, 2008 What does Deep Freeze do? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tech God Posted September 21, 2008 Share Posted September 21, 2008 What does Deep Freeze do? Freezes the system so that if any idiot goes on it and deletes system files or screws around, one reboot will revert it to original condition. (your last freeze point) Although after every school i've attended using deepfreeze, you notice small flaws. It doesn't clean all directories properly, if i install firefox, then reboot and install again, my cookies from firefox are not removed (as i am still logged in to websites.) a nifty program called Deep-Unfreezer is also available (google it), allowing people like me to unfreeze the computer, install programs, then refreeze it so they are permanently there. I experimented with it in high school a bit, now i install counter-strike source on college computers to play in my spare time, so i don't have to reinstall it every time. Even though my college gets 70,000/70,000 approx. on speedtest.net, and downloads range from 1 - 10 mb/sec (depending on how many students are using it at that time of the day), downloading 3+ gigs still takes a couple minutes =\ Trust me, if someone really wants to screw something up, they will find a way to get around it like i did. (supposing they know where to look) it's a decent program if you have younger family members though, so they don't keep installing stuff without your consent and downloading programs like limewire and getting you viruses galore. That, and you won't be asked to fix the computer every 3 days by other siblings. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
waruikoohii Posted September 30, 2008 Share Posted September 30, 2008 I used to use Deep Freeze at work, but it made managing things a pain. I use SteadyState now. Far easier. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luis.A Posted September 30, 2008 Share Posted September 30, 2008 I was interested in the product but it's such a hassle to use. I need to get things done as I think of them or else I will loose momemtum. Rebooting is not my favorite activity. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Panacik Posted September 30, 2008 Share Posted September 30, 2008 As other people mentioned, it pretty much makes your computer useless.I'm running firewalls on all my computers (app based firewalls) and AV on my Windows PC, and my router is running another firewall (set to reject everything by default), a port scanner shows a total of 1 port open, and that's just when I'm running the app on that port. My configuration gives me good security, and i can still save files. Same here. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Boki Posted September 30, 2008 Share Posted September 30, 2008 Lol i remember when I use to work for computer services at the college. I had to take care of about 150 pc's every morning. - I had about 10 floppy disks with me and would go lab to lab loading images to get rid of junk :angry: people download and installed day before. - It would bring our image server to knees with about 50 pc's loading at the same time. - Then we started experimenting with deep freeze and things changed. - All it took was one reset and pc was back to normal state. :yes: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
majortom1981 Posted September 30, 2008 Share Posted September 30, 2008 Anybody complaining about deep freeze and windows updates doesnt know how to use it. Get the corporate one and use the deep freeze server. You can set all the computers to reboot unfrozen for say 4 hours and then have your wsus server and virus server install updates at that time. Also if your pc's are blue screening with it yo ueither have a very old version or software like an out of date antivirus that doesnt get along with it. We use it here at work (public library)and it rocks. Something gets screwed up reboot. I have a feeling all the people complaining about deepfreeze have never used the enterprise version or an older version. also this deep unfreezer needs admin privaleges to work ". We must get inside Deep Freeze code, but to do that we need debug privileges. This right is granted to the administrator by default, but Deep Freeze removes it to prevent someone from doing what we are going to do. To restore this privilege get inside Windows 'Control panel', access the 'Administrative Tools' and choose 'Local Security Policy" (or run SECPOL.MSC from a command line)." Who in their right mind would give any user admin rights? As long as you have deep freeze unfreeze at say 3am -5am and have your virus scanner and wsus server install updates in that time period also make sure that the users are not admins + group policy + my documents in a thaw space(or just have no thaw space and users need to use a usb stick) You will have a computer that will be pretty much safe and not worth a hackers time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
whitebread Posted October 20, 2008 Share Posted October 20, 2008 Pfft! Deep Freeze don't do **** all. LOL. There's an easily used buffer overflow error (which even a regular user can "activate") which causes DF to cease functioning properly. There are also a couple back-door tricks which work for specific changes. :shiftyninja: And no, I will NOT share information about these exploits. They are out there, though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kami- Posted October 20, 2008 Share Posted October 20, 2008 Pfft! Deep Freeze don't do **** all. LOL. There's an easily used buffer overflow error (which even a regular user can "activate") which causes DF to cease functioning properly.There are also a couple back-door tricks which work for specific changes. :shiftyninja: And no, I will NOT share information about these exploits. They are out there, though. To quote the guy from 'Little Britain' - "Ye, I Know" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Titanium_NX Posted December 29, 2008 Share Posted December 29, 2008 Personally I have owned deepfreeze for many years and wouldn't think twice about putting it on my system. 1. No worries about virus, spyware, trojans ect.. 2. No garbage building up when you want to try software 3. Always restores the computer to the same state I always have deep freeze on when I need to install an applacation I remove it, I install the applacation fix it up, reoptimize my system defrag ect.. then put it back on. I can see people who like to trash their computer not using it but I couldn't go without this software. I use it for my company, my home computer and some work computers. Deepfreeze is one of the best if not the best software developed. Images are great but only as a secondary system for "rollbacks" IMO of course! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MasterSasuke Posted January 20, 2009 Share Posted January 20, 2009 I figure the gain in security is simply not worth it for the amount of hassle and arsing around I'd have to go through in order to use my computer daily with it. sorry, ppl, for not bothering to read this whole thread... why not just use acronis to make a perfect backup, and restore to it if something bad ever happens? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SabaTime Posted January 20, 2009 Share Posted January 20, 2009 From a Network Administrator's view Deep Freeze is a great application for securing users from malicious attacks. I attend NSCC Institute of Technology and we have about over 4000 students logging onto the Network every day. If someone messes around with the hard drives by installing garbage software or viruses, they log off and log on as if nothing was even installed on the hard drive. Fresh image every time Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tech God Posted January 20, 2009 Share Posted January 20, 2009 (edited) also this deep unfreezer needs admin privaleges to work". We must get inside Deep Freeze code, but to do that we need debug privileges. This right is granted to the administrator by default, but Deep Freeze removes it to prevent someone from doing what we are going to do. To restore this privilege get inside Windows 'Control panel', access the 'Administrative Tools' and choose 'Local Security Policy" (or run SECPOL.MSC from a command line)." Who in their right mind would give any user admin rights? Read the rest of that paragraph. It's simple to obtain a local system account... or you can just type at 12:01 /interactive "C:\DeepUnfreezer1.6.exe" for example. At 12:01 the program will be run by the system account, anything run by that will obtain debug privileges. Edited January 20, 2009 by Tech God Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
techknowl Posted January 25, 2009 Share Posted January 25, 2009 Deep Freeze is well suited for internet cafe's and college computer networks .Also they don't have other security components like Spam blocker , firewall , ad filter etc. Actually its not a program built on that angle , but essential for anyone online . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
themailnurse Posted January 26, 2009 Share Posted January 26, 2009 my high school used it because, for unknown reasons, everyone had admin access :wacko: you can run at.exe even under a restricted account? that doesn't sound right Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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