• Mon. Nov 18th, 2024

Windows Defender let me down, so I thought I’d try some popular free antivirus alternatives. They left a lot to be desired.

Byadmin

Jan 30, 2024

Andy Edser, Hardware writer

Andy Edser

(Image credit: Future)

This month I’ve been testing: Microphones, laptops and flight sticks, which is a nice smorgasbord. My USB ports are full, but to be honest I’m never happier than when I’m in the middle of a gigantic mess of tangled cables and new hardware to get to grips with.

Long ago, when I was still a whelp learning exactly what it meant to be a PC fanatic, I was taught an early lesson that has followed me to this day: You shouldn’t skimp on your antivirus protection. However, that didn’t stop me from trying out every free AV I could find in an attempt to save a bit of cash, as money was tight and I’d much rather spend my limited funds on the latest RTS than I would on boring old PC security.

Surprisingly, given my youthful proclivity for running amok on the internet downloading any file that took my fancy, I had relatively few incidents. Sure, free AVs were sometimes janky, crunchy, occasionally hard-drive savaging things, but my weekly scans rarely resulted in anything more than the odd slap on the wrist for being an internet idiot, and I took my lumps.

Source link