tankman1989
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 5
I needed to update my AV so I thought I would look at the top ranking AV's. I had Eset last year and it was great. I decided to move to the security suite (mistake) and now am going to move back to the stand alone AV.
So, I installed Kaspersky stand alone AV and not only was it horribly slow to use, the UI was just horribly simple, meaning that it lacked advanced options that I am used to to better refine my scanning & protection. I looked for an "advanced" option but failed in finding it (may be there but I'm at a loose when looking). Not only did it not have enough options for scanning & general protection, when it did scan it was horribly slow and failed at almost every attempt to remove threats. The UI relies on the back arrow button to manuver through the menu instead of having a stationary menu to select from - it seemed very cumbersome.
I then installed Eset AV 7 and the install process was much smoother and faster than Kaspersky (69MB vs 240MB!). Update process was great (although definition updates seemed to download slowly - happened on 3 installs I tried) and went smoothly. The UI is intuitive and simple enough for the average user and has enough options for an advanced user. I would like to see a more advanced UI (even if we just select the "advanced" option to get there) for tech work. I'm not a fan of the ultra simplistic UI that relies on default settings to do everything. Detection & removal were much better than Kaspersky and scan times were much faster from what I could see.
All in all, I would have to say Eset won hands down. I really have to question where Kaspersky went wrong this last year or two as they had an amazing product a couple years ago. I don't know why companies choose to mess with a successful product as it never seems to work in their favor. My only thought is that with the success comes more users, many whom may not be as tech savvy so they get requests for a more simple UI and then we get the crap we end up with. Anyone else think that might be why or have any ideas of why these AV programs tend to trend as they do and change so often?
So, I installed Kaspersky stand alone AV and not only was it horribly slow to use, the UI was just horribly simple, meaning that it lacked advanced options that I am used to to better refine my scanning & protection. I looked for an "advanced" option but failed in finding it (may be there but I'm at a loose when looking). Not only did it not have enough options for scanning & general protection, when it did scan it was horribly slow and failed at almost every attempt to remove threats. The UI relies on the back arrow button to manuver through the menu instead of having a stationary menu to select from - it seemed very cumbersome.
I then installed Eset AV 7 and the install process was much smoother and faster than Kaspersky (69MB vs 240MB!). Update process was great (although definition updates seemed to download slowly - happened on 3 installs I tried) and went smoothly. The UI is intuitive and simple enough for the average user and has enough options for an advanced user. I would like to see a more advanced UI (even if we just select the "advanced" option to get there) for tech work. I'm not a fan of the ultra simplistic UI that relies on default settings to do everything. Detection & removal were much better than Kaspersky and scan times were much faster from what I could see.
All in all, I would have to say Eset won hands down. I really have to question where Kaspersky went wrong this last year or two as they had an amazing product a couple years ago. I don't know why companies choose to mess with a successful product as it never seems to work in their favor. My only thought is that with the success comes more users, many whom may not be as tech savvy so they get requests for a more simple UI and then we get the crap we end up with. Anyone else think that might be why or have any ideas of why these AV programs tend to trend as they do and change so often?