Top Stories
|
Update glitch derails Kaspersky14 Dec 2007 12:05 Lock-up issuesPoints for VistaBy Andrew Badera
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 12:42 GMT
While Kaspersky DID pop this message on me, no reboot was needed. Kaspersky itself died, machine still going strong. Vista Business 64 bit. Hmmm, okay....By Joe Noyes
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 12:49 GMT
I am using Kaspersky AV 7. I was using it yesterday and didn't have it lock up before I went home. This morning I turned it on to be greeted with a crashed program (avp) and the message "previous application launch failed". My computer still seems to be working ok and I hit "Update" in KAV directly after the program crashed and it seems to be updating ok... Does that mean it has been fixed already or that my computer is "special"? seems to be a minor problemBy Adam Craig
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 13:10 GMT
my kaspersky crashed last night in this fashion. i restarted and the whole thing went back to normal. Re: Hmmm, okay....By Chika
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 13:12 GMT
@Joe Noyes. Dunno. I know that my machine is nothing special and my own install of Kaspersky seems fine, though it did complain a lot over last weekend when it insisted on rebooting after updating twice. Its fixed now, but what a FXXX upBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 13:24 GMT
For single users or a tiny office, this is acceptable, but for large installation sites, some that span outside the HQ, this is totally unacceptable, I read on the forum one user quote : "I pay for medical insurance and I still catch cold" What a bullshit way of looking at it, for software that affects the OS in such way is simply bad for the AV company, customers pay to be protected, and of no faults of their own this happens, which is totally different from catching a bloody cold. Another hit x2By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 13:48 GMT
Two of my systems were affected. Rebooted and redoing updates.... Even better...By Silvergunner
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 14:13 GMT
Disable Kaspersky on startup, which is what I did when my new Vista machine froze constantly less than 48 hours after I recieved it. No problems hereBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 15:31 GMT
Didn't crash yesterday or today. I was just asked to reboot my machine after the latest update - that worked fine. Same situation as Joe NoyesBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 16:24 GMT
I'm in the same situation as Joe Noyes - was fine when I left yesterday, when I got in this morning I had the message but system was running fine... hopefully kaspersky updated and fixed itself last night after it crashed. Now, if GM could build cars like kaspersky build software... a car that can recover itself from a crash... that sounds like fun! or alternativelyBy TheThing
Posted Friday 14th December 2007 23:39 GMT
...just don't install Kaspersky in the first place. Given my experience with them, that's much the best plan. This completely floored my XP machine.By Steve Button
Posted Monday 17th December 2007 09:52 GMT
My laptop was already painfully slow to use and this completely floored it. Was sorting it at 11pm last night (started trying to fix it at 9PM). I only just installed Kaspersky on Thursday after being told it was much better than AVG. How unlucky is that? It was sooooo slow, that it would do absolutely nothing for 5 minutes after boot, and the mousapad didn't work. ... but how come a two year old laptop is "painfully slow" anyway. I wish I'd bought a Mac. Steve Who hasn't sent out duff Def'sBy victor herbert
Posted Monday 17th December 2007 12:29 GMT
Maybe we should make a list of those AV vendors that haven't sent out duff Def's and only buy from them. Symantec stuffed 300 of our machines in October with a duff Def, luckily for us it arrived at night and most of our 5000+ machines where off! It took 1man/month tracking them all down and fixing. Symantec supplied us with three answers 1. it didn't happen 2. the pixies did it 3. it was the 'Users' fault. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
Breaking Hardware News
San Francisco City Council regained access to its own computer network today after Mayor Gavin Newsom convinced network administrator Terry Childs to give them the passwords.
Newsletter |