![]() ![]() It is free (for personal use), scans many files quickly, and isn’t resource intensive. If you’re more concerned about Mac-specific threats on your personal Mac than with passing along Windows viruses to your friends, iAntiVirus is worth installing. PC Tools iAntiVirus 1.0 has clearly defined limitations. ![]() The interface and speed both exceed that ofĬlamXav ( ), making it a compelling alternative to that open source product (though ClamXav protects against both Mac and Windows malware). IAntiVirus’s most attractive feature is the price: it is free for personal use, though businesses will have to pony up $30 for a license, which gets you 24/7 support, including phone support. You can sort the logs by date or alphabetically by detailed description, so you’ll never to guess what iAntiVirus is up to. You can access this history by clicking the History tab in the iAntiVirus preferences. IAntiVirus also keeps track of its own activities, from downloading updates to quarantining files. While a file is in Quarantine, it is unable to negatively impact your Mac, so while the file isn’t deleted immediately, it is put in a place where it can do no harm. From the Quarantine, you can choose to either delete the file from disk or restore the file if you think it was flagged in error. Some antivirus programs try to clean infected files and leave them where they are, but iAntiVirus places any files it suspects of being malignant into Quarantine. The iAntiVirus interface is very clean and easy to use. When IntelliGuard (or any other scan) finds a suspicious file, a Growl-like alert window pops up in the upper right hand corner of your Mac’s screen, letting you know what iAntiVirus has found and what steps it has taken. However, most users should be fine with the limited built-in scheduling.Ĭomplementing the three kinds of scans is IntelliGuard Real-Time Protection, which constantly runs in the background, protecting your Mac from nefarious files. Ideally, you should be able to define the day on which weekly scans are done and create entirely custom schedules–scanning on the second Wednesday of the month, say. (Installation of updates for both virus definitions and the app itself can be scheduled as well, with the same options.) These scheduling options are basic at best. You can also schedule iAntiVirus to scan your Mac once a week, daily, every other day, or never. Archive files (zip files, for example) can be optionally scanned for viruses as well. If you have a particular set of folders that you want to examine, then a Custom scan is what you want. The Normal scan takes longer but is far more comprehensive. Quick scan is, not surprisingly, the fastest of the three, but it scans only certain areas of your Mac’s hard drive (those that are known to typically harbor malware). IAntiVirus offers three flavors of scans: Quick, Normal, and Custom. iAntiVirus took a little over an hour to scan both drives in my Mac Pro, which hold about 830GB of data. PC Tools made this choice so the app would be lightweight its database is small, and it can scan many files very quickly. IAntiVirus 1.0 from PC Tools takes a different approach: its threat database only contains signatures for known Mac-specific malware (including viruses, worms, trojans, and the like), though the scanning engine is capable of scanning for PC threats as well.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |