Norton Antivirus 2009: Gaming Edition


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Norton Antivirus along with all of the other associated products are great products, if they're the only thing running at the time. Norton has always been a terrible anti-virus platform for notebooks. If you're running a stable desktop, Norton is ok, but by-no-means is it on the level with today's leading prevention software. I've switched from paying the yearly 60-80 dollar license fee to using freeware software. Interestingly, I've had fewer infections over the last 2 years without Norton.

They should just make one version of Norton Antivirus and have an option to select between a gaming profile or normal profile.

I'm pretty sure that's what this is. The only difference between this GAMING EDITION (OMGROTFLMAOLOL!!111oneone) and the ordinary edition is a feature to turn off Norton when a game is started (if this version is soooo fast, why would a feature like that be needed).

Unfortunately, you're not the only one thinking this. That would be highly beneficial. In-fact Norton could offer a product totally void of the intense GUI, annoying messages, and persistant scrutinization strictly for gamers at a sharply smaller cost, and it would probably turn a very high profit.

Seems quite rediculous. I only wish it didn't consider all Game Trainers as cheats. It kept deleting one on my system. I don't have time to play all games proper so for the few I play, its for the experience and not so much the challenge. I would only say it was for Company of Heroes. All the FPSes I play no cheats.

Isn't AV software not supposed to slow everything down in the first place?

Slowdown is certainly undesirable, but it doesnt mean AVs are not supposed to do that. Also it depends on the computer.

Why not implement these "gaming" features as standard across the board?

+1

Norton protect us

that's a laugh

Dude, you have no idea what you are talking about. It scored pretty well on the avcomparatives [better than NOD32 I might add].

For those of you who think Norton AV 2009 is bloated, fear not. I am trying it right now, and when idle, it only uses ~ 4 Mb X 2 processes. That is way better than NOD32. It even gives you a meter showing how many resources it is using and I noticed that it also scans faster.

Trial seems good. One thing that p**ses me right off is that if I want to buy it, on the UK site for Symantec its ?39.99, but on the US site its $39.99. Why is the UK getting ripped off yet again. I mean it's a digital download, not like anything is different.

Trial seems good. One thing that p**ses me right off is that if I want to buy it, on the UK site for Symantec its ?39.99, but on the US site its $39.99. Why is the UK getting ripped off yet again. I mean it's a digital download, not like anything is different.

If I decide to buy it at the end of the trial I'll just paypal the money to a mate in the states and get him to buy it

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