this reminds me of a common issue I have at work, we have this monster utility that is able to do just about anything, and it triggers almost every AV on the market because its basically designed to do things that the OS may not like.
Best part, trying to boot it up to kill a virus, and the craptastic antivirus installed, tries to block our repair program, completely ignoring the fact its infected 8 ways to hell
A trojan in Allegiance?
What I want to know is the good kind of virus.
TakingArms wrote:QUOTE (TakingArms @ Aug 9 2009, 07:15 AM) it's interesting how politics turns ordinarily funny, kind-hearted people into vicious, hateful attack mongers. Except IB, he's just always that way.
People just take stuff too seriously I think. Except IB, of course.
I'd still uninstall that @#(!...girlyboy wrote:QUOTE (girlyboy @ Mar 23 2009, 12:52 PM) The good kind of virus would be, like, the kind that forces your computer to participate in a distributed computing project dedicated to finding a cure for cancer.

Don't find fault, find a remedy; anybody can complain.
Cookie Monster wrote:QUOTE (Cookie Monster @ Apr 1 2009, 09:35 PM) But I don't read the forums I only post.
No, they're terrible terible people. FFS my computer's already slow enough, what's it going to be like after working on a cure for cancer? I wanna play Oblivion! 

Don't find fault, find a remedy; anybody can complain.
Cookie Monster wrote:QUOTE (Cookie Monster @ Apr 1 2009, 09:35 PM) But I don't read the forums I only post.
You mean something like folding@home?girlyboy wrote:QUOTE (girlyboy @ Mar 23 2009, 04:52 PM) distributed computing project dedicated to finding a cure for cancer.
i thought those distributed computing clients used idle cycles to do work. and i believe you can adjust its usage, as well as set a number of other things so that your computing experience isn't sucky. or right-click on the task bar icon and hit STOP CALCULATING lolz before you play oblivion
i was pumping out work units on my quad core for awhile. 'twas cool.
i was pumping out work units on my quad core for awhile. 'twas cool.
Google for LIveCD with antivirus on it. Most are free too. Every major AV manufacturer has one.
F Prot example
F Prot example
Psychosis wrote:QUOTE (Psychosis @ Mar 23 2009, 08:29 PM) this reminds me of a common issue I have at work, we have this monster utility that is able to do just about anything, and it triggers almost every AV on the market because its basically designed to do things that the OS may not like.
Best part, trying to boot it up to kill a virus, and the craptastic antivirus installed, tries to block our repair program, completely ignoring the fact its infected 8 ways to hell

