Re: Just when you think you'd seen it all.....
- From: Joel <joelw135@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 13:41:24 -0500
dannysdailys wrote:
In tis day an age you would think that with all the news about spywear and such all over people would be a bit more careful. But guess what they aren't. I told my brother in law that who ever sold him a XP system with 256k should be hung.Kevinwrote:"Colin Wilson" <void@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
etc.news:MPG.1e2fca805f37f7e89897b5@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Illegal) WinXP Pro SP1 installed, Norton system works, AOL 9.0,icons.etc, 25+ items in system startup, 10+ quick launch icons, 30+ desktopMe - 30 desktop items, 12 quick-launch items, 4 "startup"group items,but quite a few more "known" processes running in thebowels of theup.system on boot-up.
5+ minutes to boot fully, 49 processes and almost constant 100% CPU utilization.
5 minutes for the age and speed of the machine might be quite acceptable !
The worst machine I ever got called in to took SIX HOURS to boottheA single mouse click took 10-15 minutes to register, so starting a program took 20-30 minutes. It was a (at the time) quite a new Sony desktop (approx 2Ghz IIRC).
It might be interesting if you can run HijackThis on it and posthaven`tlog on here :-p
Oh, and loaded with infections I'm just sure.
Point him at my site, it might help him lock it down a little :-} http://www.coreutilities.co.uk
Question: Does this kind of situation merit a double-charge?
If he`s got the money :-p (most of the people I end up sortingbutgot a bean, but its all brownie points)
I`d also leave him on SP1 if possible given the speed of the PC,mineinstall an array of other protection (firewall, AV software, anti- spyware) - oh, and ditch Norton. Avast does a good job at keepingpersonal emailsclean, but I still carry out regular scans with Sysclean for good measure to ensure nothing has got through.
-- Please add the word "newsgroup" in the subject line of**** My email address includes "ngspamtrap" and"@btinternet.com" ****
I do some troubleshooting and repair as well as some system setup work
for a few clients and friends. I know when I'm in over my head and I tell
my potential client right up front as soon as I see I'm in trouble. I
let them know as soon as I meet them what my policy is and they appreciate it. If I can't help them, I don't charge them.
I got a call from a woman who had a friend that told her about my
services. She was an RN in a local hospital and her Dell Dimension 2400 was
giving her problems. She was complaining it would take several minutes to boot
up, her internet connection (Cable Broadband) was slow, the machine would
freeze at seemingly random intervals and it was getting to the point where she couldn't work on it.
I arrived at her house and got to work. For a nurse, her office was a
veritable slop house. Dust you could write a book in, papers, bills,
magazines and books in piles across her desk. I had to get my little
bottle of surface cleaner out and wash off the mouse and keyboard before
actually touching them with my hands. I shut off the machine and took the side
panel off. I had to take the tower outside to blow the accumulated dust
bunnies and dirt out of it. There was a wad of hair, dirt and dust about
three quarters of an inch thick in a mat over the air intakes.
With the tower cleaned out by using most of a can of compressed air I
took it back inside and hooked everything up and fired the system up. It
took a bit over 5 minutes to boot to the Windows desktop. I installed
Ad-Aware, AVG Anti-Virus Free Edition and Spybot Search & Destroy. I
updated them, noting the apparent slow (for a cable connection) throughput. I ran
AVG first.
After the first dozen or so Trojans AVG found, I started keeping a
count. The count, after 50 minutes (I kept track) of scanning and deleting
was 194 items. This was looking like a long night. I ran Ad-Aware next. An
astonishing 268 critical items later I was done with Ad-Aware. I had
now been on the clock for a little over two hours.
The best was yet to come. I started Spybot and the numbers just kept
rolling up. All the way up to 351. She had a cable internet
connection and absolutely no security software at all! No firewall, nothing! So,
after numerous reboots I had the system cleaned up and I installed SP2 and
ran all the scans again, just to be sure. I had to run CoolWebShredder just
to top it all off. I started the Windows Firewall so she would have basic
firewall protection.
The system was now booting in about one minute. I checked her
throughput and it was back up around 3 megs. I gave her a quick lesson on how to
use her new security software and how to avoid infection in the first
place. She said that her and her girlfriends traded jokes and stories in
email constantly. I asked her permission to open Outlook Express and found
she had evidently never deleted anything since she had got the system. Every email she had ever received was in the Inbox. Thousands of them. Thousands. I had never seen anything like that before.
I billed her for five hours of my time. I spent about six hours with
her system but I just bring myself to bill her for that amount. My
invoice was more than she paid for the system, new.
This was the worst system I have ever seen. I have never seen so many
viruses, worms, Trojans, adware and spyware in my life.[/quote:156a583ab0]
OMG! That is so funny because I had a similar thing happen. But, it was a freebee for me, I told them to buy a new computer. LOL
.
- References:
- Just when you think you'd seen it all.....
- From: S.Lewis
- Re: Just when you think you'd seen it all.....
- From: dannysdailys
- Just when you think you'd seen it all.....
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