![]() ![]() Also, most of them are very allergic to CHANGE – think of technically supporting your 70+ mother, father, etc. Most of these people are on fixed budgets and what they have (in terms of a PC) suits them fine – they have limited needs and really don’t need to upgrade unless something breaks and the cost of repair is more than the cost of a new machine. I support systems in an adult only community and I would bet that 90% or more of the systems I see are still XP based. But is does make sense to me that if they get out of XP support, their products would no longer support it either. If MS is taking a back seat for MSSE on XP, Ill go to another free vendor, but so far, what Ive read is that they aren’t backing off. Re MSSE, I use it, Woody Leonhard of Windows Secrets recommends it, and so far, I haven’t seen a situation where it didn’t work, if combined with a good spyware protector like Malwarebytes or SuperAntiSpyware. We believe in Microsoft antimalware products and strongly recommend them to our customers, to our friends, and to our families”. We are proud of the protection capabilities we provide for well over 150 million computers worldwide with our real-time antimalware products. Our strong solutions provide the comprehensive defense needed against malicious code and attacks. We provide a high-quality, high-performing service to our customers and if they choose not to buy on Windows 8… we want to get those people protected.”Īnd since then, they also said “We are fully committed to protecting our consumer and business customers from malware. ![]() The original quote was “Baseline does not equal bad. Obviously, they really don’t want to be in the AV/AS business. What more can we say? MS has already said it all. (very worse AV program) They have even gone so far as to suggest that Windows users, seek better AV protection elsewhere. MS has already admitted, that their AV/AS protection is at the bottom of the heap.
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