climbing_vine
Well-known
Topdog1 said:...and I don't get viruses either.
Since I used to support users (faculty/staff/students/alumni) at a University with 70k active folks, and still work closely with the support services (where my wife works), I'll say this about that.
You're right that, as of the last two years or so, it's much easier to run without getting viruses on Windows (XP only). They finally closed some of the most brain-dead openings, such as no default firewall, LANMAN hash vulnerabilities, etc.
There is a huge caveat here, however. Unlike a Mac (for whatever reasons, I won't get into the debate about marketshare vs security models vs etc here), one has to take active steps to remain clean on Windows. I can't tell you how many people come to us and say "Oh, those Mac users are full of it, I've never had a virus." And then it turns out that the reason their machine and network connection are so slow is that someone turned it into a spam-pumping bot.
It's a rare bit of malware these days that makes itself known on your machine. It's not about people crashing every computer they can to get their name in the news--it's about making billions. They're stealth, and you may not notice it until there's a deterioration in performance, or someone installs a keylogger and empties your bank account. ;P Absolutely, not clicking on stupid stuff in email is a major key to staying infection free but there are still plenty of actively exploited holes that require little to no user action, more all the time. This situation may get better with Vista and the new and improved Internet Explorer, but we don't know yet. And once you do get infected--most of the modern malware puts in roots so deep you have no choice but to wipe clean (or pay an expert $100 an hour for uncertain results). Just one slip can cost you invaluable hours and days, not to mention data loss.
I hate sounding like a zealot, and hope I don't. I'm just pointing out that, for the moment in the real world, keeping a Windows box clean requires a proactive user and a non-zero cost of time and CPU cycles, and the same is not true of Macs. It might change, but that's the current state of the world.