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| Norton SystemWorks 2008 Premier Edition 11.0 | 
enlarge | From: Symantec Category: Software
List Price: $99.99 Buy New: $34.49 You Save: $65.50 (66%)
New (24) Used (3) from $31.35
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 525
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Vista, Windows Xp Professional, Windows Xp Home Edition Media: CD-ROM Edition: Premier Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 1.4
MPN: 12813963 Model: 12813995 UPC: 037648615426 EAN: 0037648615426 ASIN: B000VQ7HO0
Release Date: November 1, 2007 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new in sealed retail box! Free upgrade to Priority Shipping!
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 6-10 of 10 | | « PREV | | |
Best Norton package yet! April 3, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
Best Norton security product package I have ever owned. And I have been a loyal Norton guy for years. A complete set of features and functions; this new Norton loves Vista.
Very Good Product! February 16, 2008 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I got this program for my HP notebook which has the following:
Operating System: Windows Vista Premium Processor: Intel Core Duo T5450 (1.66 GHz) Ram: 3Gb Video: Nvidia GeForce 8400M GS /w 256MB of dedicated memory
Install: I installed SystemWorks, AntiVirus, Save & Restore, CheckIt Diagnostics and Performance Test. These programs all need to be installed separately off the install CD. No issues other than the Antivirus install taking a long time to get the latest install updates from the web (no big deal). It was all simple and automatic with very little interaction.
Use: I have run WinDoctor, Disc Optimizer (defragger) One Button Checkup, Disc Cleanup, antivirus (full scan), System Optimizer, Performance Test and Save & Restore with no problems whatsoever. I have not noticed any performance drop on my machine with the background programs running.
PROS: Install and updates are painless. No system crashes. No noticeable performance drop due to programs running in background. It is a solid group of utilities.
CONS: I would have preferred ONE installer in which you install your choice of programs in one session to save some time. There is another reviewer that had some issues with using this product with WindowsXP. I do not know if that was an isolated incident or if the problems have been resolved.
I would recommend this product if you have a PC/Notebook with Windows Vista. If you have XP, I recommend that you do some more research to see if there are other users having problems.
Working As Expected January 2, 2008 8 out of 11 found this review helpful
Seems that Norton can't get their upgrade policy together. Upgrade price from Norton seems to be about the same as a new copy from Amazon. It appears Norton isn't very interested in keeping current customers.
Install went off without a hitch. Been a Norton user for, gosh guess it has been 10 or more years. Previous versions had alot of system overhead and slowed down my machine. So far this version seems OK, system is running fine.
Few plusses, Mountains of minuses. BYPASS. December 17, 2007 24 out of 27 found this review helpful
It appears that Symantec has been resting on their laurels.
This is their flagship consumer application, and comes bundled with a modestly improved antivirus (new network and wireless intrusion-detection features). Ghost has been replaced by Save and Restore, and you get the extras, Passmark 6.1 and SmithMicro's CheckIt 7. GoBack is still there, but not installed by default.
It sports a new interface, with a DHTML menu-like slider with scrollbars in each section that took a bit to find what I was looking for. It has an option for a "classic" inteface - but it made me think of HTML 1.0 "classic".
This was a clean install on a clean install of XP SP2.
The install went much smoother than the 2006 version of the same product which I won't cover here. I'll just say it went much smoother.
The plusses: Bundled with some somewhat useful third party (Passmark, SmithMicro) tools.
I liked Save and Restore - which would save and restore to/from any drive - network, internal or external, and Save and Restore is versatile in that you can also specify folders, or the entire drive. Save and Restore could also be scheduled/configured in dozens of ways.
The antivirus (manual scan) was blazingly fast and the new ability of NAV to monitor and interact with my home/SOHO/Wireless network was a positive development.
Passmark (6.1, rebranded Symantec), is a good tool for benchmarking, and comparing my system to others (download free user-generated comparatives at the Passmark site). I learned that my X2 3800/Ati XT1600 (2 Ghz) is 38% slower than a 2.8 Extreme iMac with XP in Boot Camp, and 290% slower than a QX6800 with 7950GT (I didn't compare them all, several thousand to compare to!).
Mostly minuses: I tried to update system drivers - bluescreen city began. A reboot from a bluescreen was usually be followed by a prompt to run one or another function I had scheduled (Save and Restore, virus scan, defrag) - leading me to believe that the scheduler has some conflicts with my AMD machine (ATI/AMD) and the drivers (7.10 - 7.12). The dump error code was useless on both MS and Google to figure out.
I was unable to use System Restore (Microsoft's built-in tool) at all after installing it - it still ran and catalogued checkpoints, but would not roll them back, even after disabling NAV and SystemWorks protection.
Defrag, when it worked - usually took 2-3 passes to defrag. It frequently just froze.
Norton process viewer (with the "google this" feature that I loved) wouldn't auto-update with active processes - whatever was running when I opened the Norton process viewer was it. If I launched Acrobat, and wanted to see what modules where in use, I had to relaunch it. Bizarro!
One Button Checkup (Windoctor, registry section) decided that the BUNDLED CheckIt (third party) tool was all ganked up, and wanted to repair about 20 entries related to it.
The antivirus, even improved, still only "actively scans" inbound and outbound ports 25/110. No IMAP. No secure SMTP/POP (required by certain ISP's now). This doesn't affect send and receive other than the packet stream isn't scanned to/from. Even the free Avast! AV offers multiport/multiprotocol options. Sad.
SmithMicro's CheckIt 7 (bundled) decided that my 939 (K8) CPU was a K7 - the 2006 version got it right tho, what gives?
Regardless, I had a very unstable system, so as a last resort, I tried the Symantec "uninstall tool" - but traces were still left behind, BSOD city. I ended up doing a OEM wipe disk, and clean reinstall of the system. All is well again.
One feature I didn't try was the bult in "paid technician remote login". It just seemed kinda sick - paying Symantec to fix what Symantec seemingly broke.
I do accept the responsibility of reading the reviews (mostly negative) and plunging in anyhow, thinking back on the good old days when SystemWorks, well, worked very well!
Bottom line: This is more of a train wreck than a mashup of useful tools.
Your milage may vary - but I'd recommend steering clear of Norton "anything" until they come out of the 90s regarding the Internet and system usability/flexibility.
It needs a clean disable (or pass through for signed system and/or critical updates).
The feature it needs the most is a 100% "One-Button Checkout" (uninstall)
Save yourself some grief November 4, 2007 28 out of 37 found this review helpful
Having bought version after version of Norton Systemworks, and having become frustrated and disappointed each time, I've finally kicked the habit.
If you want better security software, buy Trend Micro pc-Cillin Internet Security 2007 - 3 User which has significantly more features. Unlike Symantec, which sells its security products separately (Search under "Symantec" to see how many different ones you would have to buy to fully protect your computer), Trend Micro includes all of them in one program.
If, like I, you are thinking about buying Norton to clean up your registry and keep your computer running cleanly and efficiently, forget it. After years of watching my PC clog up with all the garbage generated by Windows, only to have Systemworks leave it in place, I recently bought PC Tools Registry Mechanic 6.0. It does the job cleanly, efficiently and effectively, which Systemworks does not. Highly recommended.
A useful shareware program is Super Ad Blocker. Knocks out banner ads, pop-ups and (best of all) Flash player ads.
For day-to-day disk clean-up and compacting, use the disk cleaner and defragmenter that come with Windows.
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