Will Microsoft Antivirus Software Send the Established Players to the Benches?
You have to wonder sometimes; when you buy a computer, you don’t have to have a media player, or an Internet browser, or a calculator or anything to get some basic use of it; but basically, Microsoft wants you to have a decent out-of-the-box experience getting everything done that you would commonly need to do with a computer. Bed Bugs Toronto may be simply transported in suitcases, hand baggage, personal belongings, mattresses, furniture, electronics and different objects. So how did they expect you to use a computer without even basic antivirus software, in a world where they say there are about 20 million individual pieces of virus and other malware out there just waiting to worm their wormy way into your computer? Shouldn’t they include basic Microsoft antivirus software for computer security like they include WordPad or CD burning? This isn’t just about how they should do the decent thing for their customers; this is also about the whole image of the Windows brand.
When a computer gets virus-infected you don’t even really know what it is most of the time; your computer just slows down a lot or acts erratic. And if you don’t know a lot about computers, you’re just going to blame Windows. Apple keeps trumpeting how virus infections on the Mac are practically unheard of, and the Mac experience is all about just getting work done. Across the pond in England, enough people are fed up with the general Windows experience that one in four computers sold now is a Mac. Toronto Bed Bugs are small, cryptic and agile, escaping detection after crawling into suitcases, bins and belongings.
It looks like the Macintosh is approaching critical marketshare momentum and it will be unstoppable soon. So now, to protect the Windows image from further tarnish next to a very safe (and shiny) Mac OS, Microsoft has decided on the thing it should have a long time ago – free Microsoft antivirus software; they call it Microsoft Security Essentials.