Just a brief announcement that our long computer nightmare is largely over....so let the ordering begin!
I'll go into a bit more detail following -- for those interested -- but let me just make a warning here. If you're thinking of changing anti- virus/firewall companies (McAfee to Symantec/Norton for example)...DON'T! Or at least be extremely careful.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Next update * No good deed goes unpunished
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Next update
Just so this email update has some relationship to its usual reson d'etre -- let me mention that the next update will return to its usual form. I expect to present the Delta Israel 60th Anniversary limited edition pen, and hopefully an interview that I conducted with Maryann Zucker at the NY/NJ Pen Show.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No good deed goes unpunished
It all started innocently enough. For months I'd been reading reviews of Norton 360, a new security suite from Symantec, which includes anti-virus, anti-spyware, firewall, etc., and it's improved rating -- via independent testing -- over my then current McAfee security suite. I decided to make the change when my McAfee subscription ran out.
Having run an online business for more than 10 years -- and being the CIO of a logistics company for the previous decade and in the computer field for more than 30 years -- I've always been meticulous about computer system protection (backing up data at least daily, continuously updated anti-virus signatures, etc.).
So, preparatory to making the change, I created a system restore point in Windows XP; backed up all data files online via Carbonite to their servers (which is what eventually saved me); did a full system back-up to a bootable USB ExBoot external drive; and further backed-up the system to another bootable USB PCCloneEX external drive.
I next uninstalled McAfee through 'Install or Remove' as instructed by the McAfee software, rebooted, and then installed Norton 360. I won't go through all of the gory details, but the Norton did not function properly after the installation. No problem, I thought. I simply restored my system to the state it existed in prior to my installation of Norton and uninstalling of McAfee.
Unfortunately, when the system again re-booted, the McAfee software was *not* restored as it had been. I attempted to restore to an earlier point in time, and Windows restore no longer functioned. OK. After trying various work-arounds for a few hours, I placed the dreaded call to India (Symantec/Norton) technical support. We all know how that goes.
By this point, Internet Explorer was beginning to malfunction and degrade (as it's so tightly integrated with Windows itself), and my Firefox browser wasn't too happy either. The final *advice* from Norton was to uninstall and reinstall Internet Explorer (which calls for a lot of changes within the Registry) and I knew that would only further the burgeoning disaster.
Fortunately, I thought, I have my system completely backed-up on these two separate USB bootable drives. To make a very long story short...neither would boot as advertised...after making the necessary changes to the computer's boot sequence -- either from the drives themselves or from the accompanying CDs (apparently this had to do with the appropriate drivers not loading correctly).
Anyway, I had to eventually copy my system to a new hard drive from one of the bootable disks, with less than perfect results (as there was no way to effectively re-install incremental back-ups), and then had to proceed to restore my up-to-the-minute-of-failure data files from Carbonite. That didn't work properly either, as the newest version of Carbonite makes use of Internet Explorer, which is still acting up....and on, and on, and on...
Although I somehow lost a couple of 'His Nibs.com' videos that apparently Carbonite didn't back up (fortunately they're still available on sites like MetaCafe, BrightCove, etc.), I've been able to restore all other data. I'll probably be dealing with various glitches on the system for weeks to come.
What I learned from a tech guru that I had to hire at one point, as each company of course passes the buck (Microsoft, Symantec, McAfee, Carbonite, ExBoot, etc.) -- and wish to pass on -- is that there *is* no clean uninstall with these security products. Hidden files are left, ostensibly to ease re-installation of their software, even after the end-user is told that all files have been removed.
This tech guru had run into this situation a number of times with clients, and had to brow-beat both Symantec and McAfee to admit to this situation, and after months of effort *finally* get them to supply him with tools that *really* uninstall their products!!!!! I now know what happened to my last system, about three years ago, when I switched from Norton *to* McAfee. That system was also trashed during the uninstall of Norton and the installation of McAfee. I didn't pursue it to the same degree -- as I was ready to upgrade my computer anyway, and start over.
So, for the one or two of you who have read this far (believe me, I've left out hundreds of steps pursued during the past two weeks of this nightmare), be forewarned about switching security companies; don't believe what you read about bootable external drives; create image files of your system using Norton Ghost or similar software; and back-up your data files online, and offsite (even if it takes you the better part of a week to get them all restored!).
I have to go lie down now!
P.S. No need for more Mac owners to email me to suggest I change platforms!
I don't have problems with PCs per se. This particular difficulty was platform-independent. As one of my customers wrote to me today:
"I have a Mac and had Norton Antivirus. I don't know how many times I have uninstalled it only to have it miraculously reappear again and again to remind me to subscribe again. From your story I understand now that Norton has left behind secret files. Things like that should be illegal."
In this case it was the McAfee 'secret files', but Norton does the same thing! They totally screw-up the installation of their competitor's product.
Regards,
Norman Haase His Nibs.com www.hisnibs.com Blog: http://hisnibs.blogspot.com
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Regards,
Norman Haase
His Nibs.com
www.hisnibs.com
Wow, that's brutal! I just my secretary a new Apple iMac with both OS X and Windows XP Professional loaded on it. Runs them both great and is nearly virus proof. Something you should consider. I've been on Macs for 7 years after having lost two hard drives to Windoze.