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The interface closely resembles that of the free version but does provide a few little extras in terms of configuration, including a more granular scanning system in the interface (although in both cases most scan jobs were run using the context menu option). The layout is clear and usable.
The interface is a little short on the glitz and glamour one expects of end-user products these days, looking a little old-fashioned and clunky, and although a reasonable degree of fine-tuning was available, it was occasionally tricky to find and lacking in consistency across the product. During testing we noted a number of minor issues and irritations, although for the most part these only occurred under high stress. We observed the interface freezing several times after large scan jobs, and occasionally saw other error messages which resulted in the GUI restarting. Logging also proved somewhat unreliable, with a couple of jobs requiring a re-run after no log information could be found at the end of the scan.
The interface is fairly angular and wordy, prone to occasional wobbliness, and again some high-stress work required multiple attempts after freezing up or failing to complete properly. Scanning speeds were also rather slow, and noticeably faster in the media and documents set. Overheads were fairly average, and low RAM use was countered by high consumption of CPU cycles, while our set of tasks completed in good time. Detection rates were very similar indeed, showing some splendid scores just about everywhere. This solidity of detection (if not of interface) extended to the core certification sets, with just a few warnings of possible hacker tools in the clean sets, and a VB100 award is duly earned.
Another from the Preventon/VirusBuster stable, Digital Defender is one of the older names on the list, and in this test it appears in both Premium and Pro versions. Differences between the two are minimal though: they use the same installer, and the additional components provided in the Premium edition are activated by the application of a licence key. The set-up, from the 89MB install package, ran through quickly and smoothly, and updates seemed reliable, taking around seven minutes on average.
On the third run, however, everything went completely haywire. When running through the WildList sets on access, protection seemed to switch on and off at random, and even with several runs, no consensus could be reached on which files should be blocked and which ignored. On-demand work was similarly troublesome, with scans freezing, vanishing without trace, or claiming completion but producing no log data and reporting far fewer items scanned than were actually present. Multiple reinstalls, on almost all of our tests systems over a period of more than two weeks, repeatedly brought similar experiences, and eventually we had no choice but to abandon the entire job.
Other tests were problem-free though, and on-access lag times were low, with average RAM use, CPU use a little high and a fairly big impact on our set of activities. Detection rates were splendid, extremely thorough just about everywhere, with even the proactive week of the RAP sets showing a very respectable score. The WildList sets were dealt with flawlessly, and in the clean sets we only saw a few, entirely accurate alerts on potential hacker tools. A VB100 award is thus earned without trouble. 2ff7e9595c
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