I use the free versions. Make sure that you update the data for each of them before you run them. Be sure you go through your add/remove programs, to look for a program that you don't recognize, or any that look suspicious. Definitely don't remove any Microsoft programs, though. LOL.
I have found that the other one (Malwarebytes) often finds problems that the others miss, and vice versa.
Good luck.
Tex
sc diet
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Good for you. You obviously know your way around a computer.
I'm with you on operating systems. When Vista came out, I tried it, but quickly gave up on it when it kept corrupting itself. I bought my brother a computer after Win 7 came out, and I set it up for him. Win 7 seems to work well, and it's not totally intolerable, so I suppose I could learn to live with it, but frankly I still see no reason to convert from XP. Microsoft will be dropping support for it in April, I suppose, but so what? That won't be the end of XP. Now that Win 8 is out, I suppose it's handy for tablets, but I have no desire to try to use a touch screen on the larger monitors that are popular with desktop systems these days. So I reckon I'm more than happy with XP, and I think I'll just stick with it.
Incidentally, are you aware that some folks have developed ways to make Win 8 much more palatable on desktop computers? A good place to start is with this overview of several good ways to replace the user interface on Win 8 with one much more suitable for a desktop computer. The article contains links where you can download your choice of more practical classic-style shells (user interfaces).
How to get the Start menu back in Windows 8
Or if you feel comfortable editing the registry on your computer, and you just want to get rid of the "Metro" interface and replace it with a Win 7 type of interface, here's how to go about doing that from within Win 8 (IOW, without downloading anything new).
Disable Metro UI And Get Windows 7 Styled Start Menu Back in Windows 8
Incidentally, if those ads should come back, I thought of another good program that can sometimes find malware that others miss. It's called HitmanPro. Again, the free version seems to work just fine.
Good luck,
Tex
I'm with you on operating systems. When Vista came out, I tried it, but quickly gave up on it when it kept corrupting itself. I bought my brother a computer after Win 7 came out, and I set it up for him. Win 7 seems to work well, and it's not totally intolerable, so I suppose I could learn to live with it, but frankly I still see no reason to convert from XP. Microsoft will be dropping support for it in April, I suppose, but so what? That won't be the end of XP. Now that Win 8 is out, I suppose it's handy for tablets, but I have no desire to try to use a touch screen on the larger monitors that are popular with desktop systems these days. So I reckon I'm more than happy with XP, and I think I'll just stick with it.
Incidentally, are you aware that some folks have developed ways to make Win 8 much more palatable on desktop computers? A good place to start is with this overview of several good ways to replace the user interface on Win 8 with one much more suitable for a desktop computer. The article contains links where you can download your choice of more practical classic-style shells (user interfaces).
How to get the Start menu back in Windows 8
Or if you feel comfortable editing the registry on your computer, and you just want to get rid of the "Metro" interface and replace it with a Win 7 type of interface, here's how to go about doing that from within Win 8 (IOW, without downloading anything new).
Disable Metro UI And Get Windows 7 Styled Start Menu Back in Windows 8
Incidentally, if those ads should come back, I thought of another good program that can sometimes find malware that others miss. It's called HitmanPro. Again, the free version seems to work just fine.
Good luck,
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.