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ESET Easter Special - Save 15% on ALL Home Products

30
EASTER2016

Enjoy the Internet, protected by ESET

Save 15% this Easter on all home products

DEAL EXTENDED TO THE END OF THE MONTH

Including:
* ESET Smart Security (Windows)
* ESET NOD32 Antivirus (Windows)
* ESET Mobile Security (Android)
* ESET Multi-Device Security Pack (PC, Mac, Android)
* ESET Cyber Security Pro (Mac)
* ESET NOD32 Antivirus (Linux)

All home products reduced by 15%.

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closed Comments

  • +2

    I Used to love NOD32, but it became cost restrictive.
    You make the best product on the market, but the high (by comparison) yearly fee was very limiting.
    Perhaps consider the licences to be multi-PC?

    When you get 3 PC's for $25
    http://store.pcauthority.com.au/p32876-avira_antivirus_pro_2…
    From a competitor with a similar detection rate, and system footprint, unfortunately you lose out.
    Less than $10 per user (or per PC) is hard to beat, but surely for the home segment of the market you can sharpen the pencil.

    Also, I THINK nod was one of the culprits who REFUSED to install on my Windows Server OS, despite it being a personal in house server (claimed it needed a business licence) but correct me if I'm wrong. I tested a lot of AV's and it was months ago.

    • Also, I THINK nod was one of the culprits who REFUSED to install on my Windows Server OS, despite it being a personal in house server (claimed it needed a business licence) but correct me if I'm wrong. I tested a lot of AV's and it was months ago.

      Version 8 was compatible with Home Server, but the only consumer product I've seen that will install on Server flavours of Windows with no complaints and not needing to screw around was Webroot, which I installed on my 2012 machine with no issues.

      • Wasn't home server, was Server Web Edition 2003.

        Rising Antivirus was happy to go on server.
        So was Panda, I think.
        ClamAV happily did it's thing.

        there's quite a few.
        I was just angry at being told "this free version is for home use only" and them jumping to conclusions that because I run my own Domain server that I'm not at home, nor a single user.

        • They would be exceptions, not the rule. Usually the business versions are designed for servers and are designed to take into account that certain processes shouldn't be fondled by antivirus software.

        • @douglasac10:
          For a laugh, McAffee refused, but was fine as long as I installed it 'packaged' with Flash Player, lol.

        • @MasterScythe: If that was Mcafee Security Scan, that's not an antivirus, it's some useless thing that basically does what Action Centre does (that is, tell you that you have a functioning antivirus).

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