Archived from groups: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell (
More info?)
On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 06:36:54 -0500, Rob wrote:
>On Mon, 26 Sep 2005 20:08:03 -0400, William P. N. Smith <> wrote:
>
>>I've got a couple of Dell machines which came with Norton, and am
>>trying to remove it to install McAfee. Even though I've removed all
>>3-4 of the norton apps (security center, virus scanner, livereg,
>>liveupdate), and removed their entries with startup.cpl, I still have
>>ccevtmgr and ccsetmgr showing up in my processes.
>>
>>Is there an app to tear out all the Norton dreck? This is more
>>insidious than a lot of malware! Grrrr....
>>
>>Thanks!
>
>
>I agree with you that Norton isn't worth keeping (at least that was my
>experience then and now).
>
>I don't recall how I got rid of all its files (I think I took a while
>of trying to get rid of it before successfully doing it) but this is
>what I'd do for starters... go to Administrative tools and then to
>component services and if it's listed in there, disable it. Then go
>to the Norton website and see if they tell you how to get rid of them.
>If not, then install another virus program and tell it to scan your
>system. It might find the Norton files and rid your pc of them (not
>sure on this but its worth trying). You could also try Webroot
>spysweeper to scan your system and see if it finds them (again not
>sure on this). Of course you could go into your registry and
>eliminate them manually if you're brave (don't do this unless you
>think you can and regardless, backup your registry or whole system
>first just in case).
Just to add to my post, if it matters and it may not... I use
Kaspersky AntiVirus Personal (a pain to set up but set it and forget
it as it's very stable and reliable even as a scheduled event which is
what I have done) along with webroot spysweeper and zonealarm pro. I
believe my system is clean of viri and perhaps once or twice a year
when I'm downloading email that has a virus in it (unbeknownst to me
at that moment), it (Kaspersky) will kill that email (per my
instruction in the setup) and allow the remainder of email to download
as if nothing happened automatically. Kaspersky was one of the best a
year or so ago but now not sure. Certainly others are easier to set
up. And with these programs, I don't get the crashes I got before.
Last, I remember when I first ran these programs, it seemed like they
caught stuff Nortons did not catch at that time.
Bottom line is, my system seems to be happy and so am I.