I think you are a bit biased on this, Tim. :)
What i mean by not stable, is not able to find most virus as this is what this product is for, not crashing the system. From my previous post we have seen that...
Yes, I would give credit to Bill Larson, as a great software marketer (his background) for saving MCAF from bankrupt and marketed the software so aggressively and so successfully. I wish I knew such a person was in charge of MCAF as early as you did. But at the same time since he pushed his people so hard this and last year to rush the products out, they are not as good as you thought. Both Eubanks and Larson have accused each other about misleading marketing. I think Larson has done a much better job "misleading" (if you want to call it) the potential customers. That is what the marketing all about... SYMC did rather poorly on this.
Here is an article about anti-virus product on NT. Pls See the hard numbers. (http://www.zdnet.com/wsources/content/960617/regrev4.html) ------------------------------------------ VirusScan For NT Takes A Nap
Joseph Moran
It's always a surprise when a virus program--or any utility for that matter--gives you more problems than solutions. VirusScan 2.5 for Windows NT, an update to McAfee's virus-detection tool for Windows NT, is one of those: It's neither highly reliable nor flexible. We tested the newly shipping product.
VirusScan NT runs a native NT service, but it doesn't let you perform background scans at user-defined intervals--say, any time your PC is idle. The program's scheduling times are simple, such as once a day. And you must have administrative privileges to execute complete scans, otherwise certain areas, such as the master boot record, may be off-limits. A competing product, Symantec's Norton AntiVirus for Windows NT, has the same restriction (see "NT Gets Its First Shot at First Aid," Registry, April 1996).
VirusScan integrates with the NT Event Viewer to record information about scan times and infected files, but the information it logs is quite basic. For example, finding a single infected file or an entire hard disk teeming with viruses generates the same "Infected files found" message.
We tested Virus-Scan NT on a Micron P-90 running Win-dows NT 3.51 with 48MB of RAM. We created a directory containing 14 viruses in .ZIP files, and VirusScan detected only six of them. Norton AntiVirus, by contrast, found 13 of the viruses. Speed, however, is not an issue: VirusScan scanned our 1,478 local files in 59 seconds; Norton Anti-Virus took about 57 seconds.
VirusScan NT needs more flexibility in scheduling and logging virus scans and more accuracy in detecting viruses. You may want to try it, but you probably won't want to keep it.
About... McAfee VirusScan NT
VirusScan NT isn't reliable or flexible enough to warrant serious consideration.
PROS: 30-day evaluation period. CONS: Detected less than 50% of viruses on test machine.
PRODUCT: VirusScan 2.5 for Windows NT COMPANY: McAfee Associates, Inc., Santa Clara, CA PRICE: $49; two-year subscription, $60 AVAILABILITY: Now UPGRADE: Free to subscribers to the Win 3.x or Win 95 version OS SUPPORT: Win NT 3.51 |