On 10 Jun 2004 11:11:36 -0400,
(E-Mail Removed) (Al Dykes) wrote in
<ca9tn8$3nf$(E-Mail Removed)>:
>
>I just converted a AOL dial-up user to broadband. He's keeping his
>AOL subscription (he actually ordered BB thru AOL) but I've shown him
>that he no longer uses the AOL browser to search the net.
He does if he's got AOL open and types in that address bar...
He could also open an independent browser copy - NS, IE, whatever -
and do it that way.
BTW, "AOL's browser" is IE. The biggest difference is the connection
through AOL's web proxies.
>All his
>email comes thru AOL, so it's fairly-well filtered.
Except when the attachment scanner is broken.
>His machine as AOL's antivirus process installed in it, which I've
>never heard discussed. How good is it if the PC is going to
>browse the net without going thu AOL's system ?
Do you actually mean AOL Spyware Protection, or the anti*virus*
subscription they offer by the month? The Antivirus is McAfee 8.0.
It's the same McAfee 8.0 as any other except for the update process.
Avoid the spyware thing like the plague - if he's got that, uninstall
it now.
>I assume it's being updated as long as he keeps his AOL mail
>subscription.
It'll be updated as long as he's an AOL subscriber and pays the bill,
and it can connect to McAfee's update servers via AOL. That's been an
issue recently, but I think it's cleared up now. It looks like
McAfee, despite dealing with AOL traffic for several years, failed to
anticipate the volume. That's just my guess from the problems
reported.
>FWIW He's behind a router firewall.
Carol