Re: Norton Plug-in (+Norton)
- From: "Suzanne S. Barnhill" <sbarnhill@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 20 Aug 2006 17:03:51 -0500
When I bother to look at what NAV and also ZoneAlarmPro have caught, I can
see that they are doing their job (ZAP has more of a tendency, catlike, to
present its prey for my approval and admiration), but the only time I have
ever had any kind of infection was with the Blaster worm (August 2003),
which I managed to get before news of it began to spread and the AV
providers responded. Luckily, it was a relatively easy one to clean and
didn't do any permanent damage. Still, I'm prudent about Web sites and
careful about opening files.
Hmm, looking at my logs, I see I also got a Backdoor.Coreflood infection in
July 2004 and had to clean that through DOS, which I describe as a
"nightmare." Again, though, there was no loss of data. Both infections
actually did me a favor, as the Blaster one resulted in my getting around to
updating Windows 2000 to SP4, and the other resulted in my upgrading from IE
5.0 to 6.0.
The preloaded version is probably just good for 90 days. I thought this was
a bit misleading when I bought a Dell with NAV thrown in as an "extra" and
then found that after 90 days I had to pay for it (I thought I'd gotten a
full year's subscription).
I tend to be ambivalent about whether to just resubscribe each year (you do
get downloads of the new engines along with the virus definitions, it seems)
or to buy a boxed version so I have the CD. The last time I did the latter,
I vowed never to do it again, as you have to uninstall NAV to install the
new version (thus leaving the computer unprotected for the length of time it
takes to install, and it's not practical to disconnect from the Internet
because it wants to go online immediately to register and update), and I had
some other installation woes that I won't go into, not to mention the
nuisance of trying to get a rebate, etc. I thought maybe buying the retail
version would provide more new bells and whistles than just renewing my
subscription, but now I'm not convinced of that, and renewal is certainly a
lot easier provided you don't mind giving credit card details online (though
I seem to have had some sort of hassle the last time I tried to do that,
too).
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
<aalaan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:44e8cde7@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Thank you so much, Suzanne. This was exactly what I wanted. You done itcome
again. Time and time again you have saved readers of this ng umpteen hours
of frustration. There'll be a jar of vegemite awaiting you if you ever
to Australia.how
Just one final question: How long is the preloaded version valid for and
much is the (presumably) annual update or activation arrangements. Oh, andI
suppose one more question: Has it ever found anything? I suppose thedoesn't
cynical would say 'If it's found nothing then that might suggest it
catch anything.'this
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" <sbarnhill@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uLIKzrIxGHA.4880@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I am quite happy with NAV. It updates automatically without bothering me
(when I was on dial-up, I had it prompt me, but now that I have DSL, I
just
let it do its thing), and I've never had a virus. If NAV is installed
normally, disable the Plug-in as follows:
1. Open Norton AntiVirus (right-click on the Systray icon and choose
newsgroupoption).
2. Click on the Options button at the top of the dialog.
3. In the Options dialog, click on Miscellaneous (menu on the left)
4. Clear the check box for "Enable Office Plug-in."
5. OK out and close NAV.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the
Thanks.so
all may benefit.
<aalaan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:44e89250@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sorry Graham, but I found this a bit difficult. Could you help me by
answering the exact questions that I posed in my original post?
isOffice,
I've got two problems. If I encourage my edit client (author) to buy
as he has Norton's already installed on his Dell, exactly what stepsshould
he take to disable the Norton plug-in (he is even less of a computerexpert
than I am -- 'the application' doesn't tell either of us *which*does
application... New question: exactly what are the likely problems if he
not?keeps
Second problem: Do I activate the Norton software on my laptop when it
nagging me. How long does it last before I have to activate? How much
Norton's?it
to do that?
Apart from the Office plug-in, are posters generally happy with
haveunregister
"Graham Mayor" <gmayor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eMfBO7BxGHA.2260@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Checking of Word/Office documents can usually be deselected in Norton
AV
by turning off its Office Plug-in from the application's options.
With some versions of the Norton product it may be necessary to
Startthe calling DLL by running the following command line from Windows >
> Run
regsvr32 /u "c:\program files\norton antivirus\officeav.dll"
or
regsvr32 /u "c:\program files\norton systemworks\norton
antivirus\officeav.dll"
Other AV apps eg the popular free ediition of Grisoft's AVG antivirus
software, require similar treatment.
In this instance:
regsvr32 /u "C:\Program Files\Grisoft\AVG Free\avgoff2k.dll"
Norton AV is an application that you have to pay for. Though limited
trials are often included with PCs. Once that trial has ended you
Free.to
freepay for the updates. If you don't want to do that, download Grisoft's
version of its AVG software, uninstall Norton AV and install AVF
The
softwareupdates for that are available daily. Make sure that whatever AV
you have you update it frequently - preferably automatically.
--
<>>< ><<> ><<> <>>< ><<> <>>< <>><<>
Graham Mayor - Word MVP
My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org
<>>< ><<> ><<> <>>< ><<> <>>< <>><<>
aalaan@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi all
I'm going to encourage a client to buy MS Office (prob 2003 from a
box) so that he san see the edits I'm doing in Word from his
manuscript (converted from Works). This will also let him read my
schedules in Excel.
1 He already has Norton loaded on his Dell. I have read much on
here about disabling the Norton Word Plug-in. Assuming that the rest
of Norton is good, exactly how to I do this disabling?
2 Also, on my own laptop was some Norton stuff pre-loaded. The
laptop keeps nagging me that I am vulnerable so click on the Norton,
presumably to activate it. Is any payment involved? If not, how long
does it last? Have posters found Nortons to be OK generally (apart
from the plug-in)? And again, how exactly do I disable the Word
plug-in?
Thanks all.
.
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- Norton Plug-in (+Norton)
- From: aalaan
- Re: Norton Plug-in (+Norton)
- From: Graham Mayor
- Re: Norton Plug-in (+Norton)
- From: Suzanne S. Barnhill
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