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Computer virus fixing threads
Posted on 4/16/11 at 12:25 pm
Posted on 4/16/11 at 12:25 pm
Should we sticky a thread with virus removal instructions and the general things to remove them on the help board so that patrons requesting info can be directed to the help board?
There are a few posters who really know what they are talking about and i think a collection of their info would save them time in the future.
There are a few posters who really know what they are talking about and i think a collection of their info would save them time in the future.
Posted on 4/16/11 at 5:57 pm to ADLSUNSU
Or activate the long-anticipated Tech Board and sticky it there.
Posted on 4/17/11 at 2:20 am to ADLSUNSU
Here's the only virus removal you'll every need:
Install Linux
Don't use Windows.
no virus - ever
Install Linux
Don't use Windows.
no virus - ever
Posted on 4/18/11 at 12:15 pm to OohPooPahDoo
quote:
Here's the only virus removal you'll every need:
Install Linux
Don't use Windows.
no virus - ever
Or compatibility.
And spare me about the shite you can do to emulate Windows - you're still using windows if you have to emulate it in my book, Linux fanboy
Posted on 4/18/11 at 12:22 pm to Hulkklogan
quote:
Or compatibility.
And spare me about the shite you can do to emulate Windows - you're still using windows if you have to emulate it in my book, Linux fanboy
I think over 90% of home users would do just fine running Linux. After all, doesn't everyone looking to buy a new computer say "I just need something for email and web browsing"?
That said, I wouldn't go as far as saying "no virus - ever"
Posted on 4/18/11 at 1:13 pm to Korkstand
quote:
I think over 90% of home users would do just fine running Linux. After all, doesn't everyone looking to buy a new computer say "I just need something for email and web browsing"?
Agreed, but trying to explain to a "non computer person" that to install a flash plugin for their browser (for surfing sites like YouTube) they should type "sudo apt-get install flashplugin-nonfree" into the Terminal, I'm willing to bet that half of them stop listening before "apt-get"
ETA: as simple and powerful as Linux OSes can be(Universal Repositories being a HUGE plus), it's not what most people are accustomed to, and, from experience, people don't typically like to learn.
This post was edited on 4/18/11 at 1:21 pm
Posted on 4/18/11 at 1:22 pm to Hopeful Doc
quote:
Agreed, but trying to explain to a "non computer person" that to install a flash plugin for their browser (for surfing sites like YouTube) they should type "sudo apt-get install flashplugin-nonfree" into the Terminal, I'm willing to bet that half of them stop listening before "apt-get"
I know, and that's unfortunate because I find apt-get much easier than hunting for software on websites, and Ubuntu's software center is a pretty user-friendly front end for it.
On the plus side, it's pretty rare to have to manually install a driver in Linux.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 1:29 pm to Korkstand
quote:
it's pretty rare to have to manually install a driver in Linux
Posted on 4/18/11 at 2:20 pm to Hopeful Doc
I've always wanted to try out Ubuntu but I'm settled in my ways with Windows. Why fix it if it ain't broke?
Posted on 4/18/11 at 2:33 pm to Hulkklogan
quote:
I've always wanted to try out Ubuntu but I'm settled in my ways with Windows. Why fix it if it ain't broke?
A lot of times you don't know that something is broken unless you try something else. Another good reason to try it is to expand your knowledge. A little learning never killed anybody.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 2:35 pm to Hulkklogan
quote:
Why fix it if it ain't broke?
Dual boot, FTW!
You can install Ubuntu "next to" Windows on your hard drive (I've never seen Windows NOT leave enough room for this to be done). You can choose which one you want to boot into any time, or you can use unetbootin on a 2-4 GB flash drive, and run your entire OS from your USB stick.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 2:54 pm to Hopeful Doc
quote:
Dual boot, FTW!
You can install Ubuntu "next to" Windows on your hard drive (I've never seen Windows NOT leave enough room for this to be done). You can choose which one you want to boot into any time, or you can use unetbootin on a 2-4 GB flash drive, and run your entire OS from your USB stick.
Yeah I know about dual booting. I work tech support, have my A+, yadda yadda
Some of my friends used to use a version of Linux, forgot which one, but I didn't like it a whole lot.. probably just because I wasn't used to it. I don't know what the heck I'd use it for. It would serve no real purpose for me. What would be some benefits?
Posted on 4/18/11 at 3:11 pm to Hulkklogan
quote:
What would be some benefits?
Here's a short list of why I like it:
1. I like to tinker and learn how things work
2. Pretty much any type of program is available for free, and only takes one command to download and install.
3. It stays the hell out of my way and lets me get shite done.
4. The built in package manager checks ALL of the software on my system and keeps it updated. Not just drivers and system apps like Windows Update, and not a dozen background apps in the system tray that only update specific apps... everything
When I use a Windows computer now, everything I do on it feels like a huge hassle.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 3:17 pm to Korkstand
I've always figured it's incompatible with most of my video games. Is that true and I'd have to emulate or just boot into Windows or would I be able to play most of them?
Posted on 4/18/11 at 3:23 pm to Korkstand
quote:
2. Pretty much any type of program is available for free, and only takes one command to download and install.
Want to get into music, audio, or video production? You're one command away from installing a multimedia studio (for free, and totally legal) that rivals anything you could want to buy.
Need to create a slideshow, spreadsheet, or text document? Open Office (or Libre Office) are far more than viable workarounds for MS Office. (Note: you will have problems running MS Excel macros in Open/Libre Office Calc (spreadsheet utility). You also will not be able to collaborate with Access users on databases (you can convert them and open them, but you have to save them as .odb, not .mdb), but this is more of an enterprise-end issue than home-end)
There are functional open-source alternatives to nearly every piece of software on the market.
The inherent security (you can't install programs without the admin password) makes it far more difficult for malicious software to find its way into your system.
And it has a much lower footprint on your system utilities than most modern-day OS. "Yesterday's" computers can run "today's" Linux distros without much compensation at all.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 3:27 pm to Hulkklogan
quote:
I've always figured it's incompatible with most of my video games. Is that true and I'd have to emulate or just boot into Windows or would I be able to play most of them?
Most of your games probably won't work, but check the Wine AppDB to check the compatibility of your favorite games. Even so, obviously they'll probably run better if you boot into Windows.
Also, Wine Is Not an Emulator, it's a compatibility layer.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 7:30 pm to Hopeful Doc
quote:
Want to get into music, audio, or video production? You're one command away from installing a multimedia studio (for free, and totally legal) that rivals anything you could want to buy.
Really now? You've really piqued my interest with that one. I play music and love fooling around with music production and I like to record myself playing games and video editing stuff together.
I think I'll download Ubuntu and start giving it some testing.
Posted on 4/18/11 at 7:46 pm to Korkstand
lol i downloaded it but I need to get a dvd so I can burn the ISO onto it. I imagine you have to boot from CD.. or would it be possible to use like alcohol 120 or some virtual drive and install it that way?
Posted on 4/18/11 at 8:12 pm to Hulkklogan
I'm on mobile, so i'll tell you to pop into the other computer help thread (Toshiba laptop) to see where to download Unetbootin to boot from a USB drive. if i remember correctly, i had trouble putting the U.S.iso on my flash drive, so i put the basic Ubuntu 10.04 (10.10 is out now) on a flash drive, and you can upgrade all the packages from the inside- Ubuntu Studio is just a customized Ubuntu (they can each do anything the other can, with a little manipulaton). Also- there is no live version of U.S. last i checked.
i'll explain how awesome Ardour and JACK are later for music production, and hopefully i'll be able to answer any questions you have that the Ubuntu Community doesn't have answered regarding them.
i'll explain how awesome Ardour and JACK are later for music production, and hopefully i'll be able to answer any questions you have that the Ubuntu Community doesn't have answered regarding them.
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