atlanticjim
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 36
- Location
- Long Island, New York
Here is a post from me about a year ago. I have had good commments on it so I am repeating.
Just a few comments.
You MUST get adept at manual virus removal as that is the way to speed up your work (read $$) and set you apart in the marketplace. Last week I got an unbootable machine that was quoted $300 from another shop to N/P without data backup. I was able to clean and restore to full function and already have two word-of-mouth referrals from it.
You will find many discussions about Nuke and Pave here in the forums and the consensus is that for home users it is a bad solution. It disappoints the customer in many ways, change to everything they got used to and leads to many call backs such as "where is that picture of the little man I used to click on to talk to my cousin in Minnesota?" "How come when I look at my pictures it looks different, I want it the same" (file extension linked to some default viewer instead of the proprietary one that installed when they installed their printer . . . yes . . I am talking about you HP). No MS Office installation disk 'cause it was a pirated copy from their old girlfriend's IT guy. It goes on and on and on.
The exception is the office machine with excellent backup and all necessary program install disks. There the N/P solution is expected.
Next point. MBAM is designed to work in a normally booted environment. Slave the drive and MBAM will only remove a portion of the offending rogue because it has not generated the random exe files that cause the rogue's behavior.
On my bench machine I have realtime scanning disabled. There is no good reason for it to be in place since I know what I am accessing, it slows everything down and when an infected drive is connected it does freak out.
If you are going to be learning manual virus removal, optimize your time by taking the virus jobs all together and only in the shop. Have three machines running your MBAM/Roguefix/UnHackme/DrWeb/SuperAntispyware/et. al. while you spend your time with one machine in "Manual Virus Removal University". (Multitasking = $$)