"Martin Brown" <|||newspam|||@
nezumi.demon.co.uk> wrote in message
news:eEewt.39990$1O3....@newsfe22.iad...
>
> Norton utilities in the very distant old days was good. Not so its modern
> offerings unless you are fond of resource hungry bloatware.
>
> McAfee seems to combine the worst of all worlds. I marvel at the fact that
> so many corporate IT types inflict it upon their end users!
I'd be wary of any software maker that has deals in place to have their
bloated stuff pre-installed on new PCs. Their paid "updates" are no
different to Epson giving away printers but charging the earth for ink. "If
you uninstall this software or refill your ink cartridges, bad things will
happen to you & your family"
I had an uninvited copy of Norton on a new PC that I bought a few years ago,
and you had to actually download *another* Norton program (not advertised
but found via Google) to uninstall it properly, the preinstalled uninstall
option left bits of it everywhere and crashed the OS. And even then you had
to answer questions like "Hey, you do know you will die horribly if you
uninstall this? Yes or No?". And of course, the Windows recovery disk that
came with the PC wasn't actually a vanilla copy of Windows, it was the PC
manufacturer's buggered-about-with copy of Windows so the unwary would
re-install Windows after a major issue, and end up with all the crap again.
It's the same thing nowadays with Smartphones that come with crap like
Spotify and cloud storage already loaded and can't be removed (unless you
void your warranty and root the device). At least on a PC you can eventually
get rid of this rubbish, it may take a few days but you'll get there.