Monday 17 September 2012

SpeedBit Video Accelerator3.1.5.7 FULL FREE


SpeedBit Video Accelerator3.1.5.7

3.4 out of 5 stars 3.4 (93 votes)

()

Windows 2000/Server 2003/Vista/XP / Freeware / 26,685 downloads

SpeedBit Video Accelerator makes your videos stream faster and play smoother, reducing buffering problems and video "hiccups". The unique video search lets you find the latest and hottest videos around the web, and the "Recently Accelerated" list gives you instant access to the last videos played.
 






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G DATA Internet Security 2012 Final || License || 526MB FREE


G DATA Internet Security 2012 Final || License || 526MB




                            G DATA Internet Security 2012 Final || License || 526B  



PUBLISHER DESCRIPTION:

G DATA InternetSecurity is a simple, secure and ressource saving software, provides complete antivirus, anti-spyware, antispam, and anti-hacking protection.
Safeguard online banking. Safe surfing. Safe shopping. Keep your family safe from Internet child predators. Alongside improved award-winning virus protection and optimization of the intuitive user guidance, G Data InternetSecurity also protects all online activities by means of a “Silent Firewall.” Operating invisibly without any loss of computing power or user-stressing querying, it successfully blocks hackers, viruses and spam. Parental controls also offer added protection. Safe emailing and chatting, Blocks annoying spam. Maximum security from the record test winner: Constant optimum virus detection; For many years the quickest response time to new viruses; The latest methods for detecting unknown viruses (behaviour blocking, heuristics, cloud security). G Data Software, Inc. knows that the PC is a central piece of every home today and that it requires protecting.
===============================================

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Sunday 16 September 2012

Saturday 15 September 2012

Friday 14 September 2012

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Sunday 2 September 2012


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System Requirement :

OS : Windows XP, Vista dan 7
RAM : 2 GB
VGA : 256 MB Support Pixel Shader 3.0 - GeForce / ATI
HDD : 16 GB Tersedia (Untuk Instalasi)
Processor : Intel Dual-Core 2.8 Ghz (Core 2 Duo - Recommended) atau Lebih tinggi
DirectX 9.0 Compatible

Homepage:  http://www.callofduty.com/mw3

Password: krenship

Saturday 1 September 2012

AVG INTERNET SECURITY 2012 PREMIUM WITH SIX YEARS LICENSE FREE DOWNLOAD


AVG PREMIUM FOR U

Some security companies appear to think that enhancing their software is just about adding new functionality. But while this can make for an enticing feature list, there’s usually a price to pay, in terms of extra complexity and layers of overweight code that slows down the rest of your PC.
So it’s good to see AVG take a different approach with their latest Internet Security 2012 release.
The package comes with everything you’d expect from a consumer security suite. A powerful antivirus engine, browsing protection, firewall, spam filter, identity theft protection, rootkit detection and more.
New features include a revamped, more intelligent LinkScanner, to detect even more malicious web pages; and a new behavior monitoring layer that can detect even brand new, undiscovered fake antivirus tools just by their actions.
But a strong focus on performance sees the addition of the AVG Advisor, which alerts you to system resource hogs, and the AVG Accelerator, which can (it’s claimed) improve YouTube and Download.com downloads by up to 50 percent.
And despite all the extras, AVG claims Internet Security 2012 has less impact on your boot times, uses less processes and requires up to 20-percent less RAM than before.
Sounds good to us. But could the suite live up to these promises? Let's take a closer look.
Getting Started
After an easy installation, we rebooted our test PC, nd timed the results -- then repeated the process for good measure, because boot times are one good indicator of how bloated (or otherwise) a security suite might be.
The results were impressive. With AVG Internet Security 2011 installed on this system, average cold boot times were around 55 seconds. Replacing it with Internet Security 2012 cut this to 43 seconds, little more than the typical boot time with no security suite installed at all (39 seconds).
If you’ve chosen to install AVG’s desktop gadget then this also makes for a very straightforward initial interface. The gadget warns you of the lack of an updated antivirus database; you can fix this with a click, and then check your system by clicking the Scan Now button.
Or you might alternatively launch the program’s main console via its system tray icon, when you’ll see this is simpler, too. AVG Internet Security 2011 packed its opening screen with 17 icons; the 2012 edition cuts this down to ten, and three of those relate to optional AVG add-ons (Family Safety, $0.99 for a year’s subscription; LiveKive’s online backup, from $49; and PC Tuneup, $34.99): it’s far easier to use.
There are still small interface issues here. Open the Browser Extensions module, for instance, and you’ll see a table of IE browser add-ons, but this can only display four at a time, and even if you maximize the program window it won’t resize to show any more: annoying, and there are one or two similar problems elsewhere.
But for the most part, the Internet Security 2012 interface is a useful step forward: clean, easier to use, while still being familiar to anyone who’s used the previous version.
Antivirus
Internet Security 2011 was great at detecting malware, and 2012 also excelled, detecting and removing 91 percent of our test samples.
Speed matters too, though, and the new package delivered on its performance promise here, too. In comparison with Internet Security 2011, the first optimization scan was around 7-percent faster (58 minutes 8 seconds vs 62:31); the second showed massive improvements as 2012 immediately decided what didn’t have to be scanned (8:31 vs 41:24); 2011 then caught up a little, but 2012 retained a small lead for scan 3 (7:09 vs 7:56), and the new build remained faster for all our subsequent tests.
Notably, Internet Security 2012 was also more consistent in its scan times; 2011 delivered occasional blips (one scan 9:54, the next 16:26, even though the system was virtually unchanged); the scan times for 2012 were a much closer match, and it never kept us waiting unexpectedly.
If there’s one small annoyance with the scanning process, it’s that this won’t detect rootkits; there’s an entirely separate anti-rootkit scan. This is fast, though: a full scan on our system completed in around 4 minutes, a “Quick Scan” took 67 seconds, and both are good at identifying stealthy malware and hidden objects in general, with the program picking up 83 percent of our test samples. The results can be a little complex, however: we’d hazard a guess that lines like “i8042prt.sys, hooked import ntoskrnl.exe IoCreateDevice” won’t mean much to the average user, and this makes it tricky to separate rootkits from false positives regarding legitimate drivers.
Browsing Protection
AVG Internet Security 2012 protects your browsing via its LinkScanner technology, which includes three components:
1. Search-Shield displays icons next to results from the main search engines (Google, Bing, Yahoo, Baidu) to indicate whether they’re safe, questionable or dangerous. It’s not too reliable; we were still able to reach some newly reported malicious pages,  but it does identify a few more dubious websites than the browsers alone, and as it imposes little performance impact (the icons loaded within a second on our test PC), Search-Shield is worth having.
2. Surf-Shield monitors for websites that include phishing scams, exploits and other hacks. This also was far from perfect (we were able to reach around half of the dangerous sites we tried), but then our sample sites were brand new, and again it was better protection than you’d get from browser features like IE’s SmartScreen filter alone.
3. Online Shield checks the pages you’ve visiting for files (downloads, forced downloads, even JavaScript), aiming to identify anything dangerous and preventing it from causing havoc on your PC. This followed a similar pattern to the others, detecting around 70 percent of our test samples, not the best of scores.
But, when you put all three layers together, and factor in the regular antivirus engine waiting on your PC to inspect anything that should get through, there is plenty of protection here, and nothing was able to reach and infect our system.
And, keeping up with the promise of improved performance, it’s far less likely to slow you down: Firefox load times on our test PC were around 20-percent faster than under Internet Security 2011.
Antispam, Firewall
AVG’s antispam offering proved easy to use, integrating seamlessly with our Outlook 2010 installation (though it works with most other clients, too). However, by default the program uses the least aggressive spam detection settings. This was good, as it meant not a single legitimate email was falsely highlighted as spam; but it was also bad, because around 45 percent of our test junk emails weren’t detected as spam, either.
This isn’t necessarily the end, though. At a minimum you can simply increase the filter’s sensitivity to spam by dragging a slider. And experts can also tweak the filter in many different ways (adding Realtime Blackhole Lists, configuring white or black lists, filtering by language, country, character sets and more), which should help, though it may take some work and time to achieve the results you need.
Meanwhile, Internet Security 2012′s firewall also installed and configured itself without problems on our test PC. Although if you have problems then it’s easily reconfigured, just by choosing an appropriate profile from the Firewall module (“Small home or office network”, “Computer within domain”, “Directly connected to the internet”, and so on).
Once active the firewall then correctly stealthed our ports and blocked a test network attack.
However, as with Internet Security 2011, if the firewall sees a program it doesn’t recognize then it’ll display an alert, asking you for permission. As we said last year, these prompts are reasonably clear, but there’s no guarantee that the user will always know exactly what should be done, which is why some competing firewalls are intelligent enough to make most of these decisions themselves.
Other Features
Internet Security 2012 also includes “Identity Protection”, a module which, the program says, uses behavior monitoring to automatically block “any activity that could lead to ID theft”. Sounds great to us, although as there are few details on how this works we were unable to construct a meaningful test for it.
The “System Tools” component provides a useful view of what’s happening on your PC. You can look at running processes and some of their attributes (processes with hidden windows, for instance, are highlighted). There’s a display of currently open Internet and network connections, with the option to close anything that looks suspicious. You can similarly view startup programs and IE browser extensions, removing whatever you like, while a final screen provides a more technical list of your installed Layered Service Providers. These aren’t going to replace tools like Process Explorer any time soon, but they’re a welcome inclusion here.
New this time around is AVG Accelerator, an Internet speedup tool which uses some proprietary AVG technology to accelerate downloads from YouTube and Download.com (support for more sites will be added later, we hear). This is difficult to evaluate accurately, but files did appear to download perhaps 30-percent faster for us, so if you currently have problems watching higher definition YouTube videos on a slow connection then maybe the Accelerator will help.
And you also get the AVG Advisor, which during our tests displayed pop-up alerts a few times to tell us that IE or Firefox were using too much RAM, and should be rebooted. This isn’t a bad idea, but it’s currently a little basic. A history of RAM use might be useful, or the ability to define what “too much RAM” means to you, but there are no such controls: all you can do is turn AVG Advisor alerts off or on.
Still, at least it doesn’t seem to have made the suite any more overweight. Open Task Manager, say, and you’ll see lots of obvious AVG processes (10) and there are others, but the total has fallen since Internet Security 2011, and RAM requirements have dropped too (AVG says by 20 percent, our own tests show a fall of 18 percent in just one scenario: it could easily be more in others).
AVG Internet Security 2012 isn’t perfect, then: the browsing protection components could benefit from being a little smarter, and we’d like to see more intelligence in the firewall, too.
Elsewhere, though, the program provides a simpler interface, greater malware detection accuracy, and easier integration with AVG’s online backup and parental control tools, if you need them. The AVG Accelerator appears to be a promising Internet acceleration tool (though more tests are required), and best of all, the suite is faster and more lightweight than ever, with a reduced performance impact on your PC. If you’re thinking about changing your security suite for the new year, particularly because it’s slowing you down too much, then AVG Internet Security 2012 more than merits a place on the shortlist.
The software is available for Windows XP, Vista and 7 -- all 32 and 64-bit editions and retails for $54.99.

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BITBEFENDER INTERNET SECURITY 2013 FULL FREE DOWNLOAD


If you like your security suites to be feature-rich then Bitdefender’s offerings have always been a good choice. And the company’s latest releases show there’s no sign of that changing any time soon: Bitdefender Internet Security 2013 includes all the core functionality you’d expect from a suite (antivirus, firewall, spam filter, parental controls) and a lot you probably wouldn’t (virtual “Safepay” browsing, USB autorun virus protection, more).
All this power doesn’t seem to add much in the way of complexity, though. Installation is straightforward, with a single small setup tool scanning your system for threats, downloading the full suite and installing it for you with the minimum of hassle.
And Internet Security 2013′s use of Bitdefender’s Autopilot technology means that, initially at least, the program will resolve almost every security issue on its own. So there’s no blizzard of popups, no alerts, not even any configuration options to set -- at most you’ll see a new indicator on the program’s gadget to show that some event has occurred (and you can even ignore that, if you like). It’s all very straightforward.
If you’d like to take more manual control of what’s happening, though, the Internet Security 2013 console is on hand. This presents six panels covering the main program areas (Antivirus, Antispam, Privacy, Firewall, Updates, and Bitdefender’s social networking protection, Safego).
There’s a lot of management functionality here -- you can disable particular modules, configure them, run virus scans and more -- but it’s all well organized, and we had no real problems finding our way around. Which is probably just as well, as the Help system isn’t great (to locate the “USB Immunizer” entry you must search for “Immunizer”, for instance, as “USB” returns nothing).
How did these individual modules behave, though? That’s what we checked next.
Antivirus
Bitdefender Internet Security 2013 offers plenty of antivirus options. Its “Autoscan” mode checks your system for threats whenever it’s idle; files are scanned for malware as you access them; you can run quick, full or custom scans on demand, and Rescue Mode provides a bootable environment which can disinfect a system, even when Windows no longer starts (as long as you’re using Vista or later).
Scanning speeds are initially disappointing, but performance quickly improves. Our first “Quick” scan was 6 minutes 10 seconds, but this dropped to 1:42 next time, and 1:23 by the third scan.
Similarly, our first full system scan took just over an hour, but this plummeted to 7:11 by the second. And if you need more performance gains then there are plenty of configuration options which may help.
Accuracy? Bitdefender’s antivirus engine generally does well in independent testing. AV Comparativesawarded it the highest Advanced+ rating in their March 2012 Comparative tests, for instance, and the program was particularly notable for its lack of false positives.
Our own tests were rather smaller, with 10 of the very latest malware samples spread around a test environment, but we had a very similar experience: Internet Security 2013 detected and removed every one, while raising very few false positives (beyond the usual one or two concerns over NirSoft tools).
And again, Autopilot meant we didn’t have to choose what to do with every single file: the program decided on our behalf for 59 files, only asking about one particularly tricky case. This works for us, as Autopilot generally makes sensible decisions, but you can take alternatively take full manual control if you prefer.
Browsing Protection
Detecting malware is good, but avoiding infection in the first place is better, and Bitdefender Internet Security 2013 offers several components which help you do just that.
The simplest options just alert you to dangerous links. Search Advisor adds warning icons to your Google, Bing, Yahoo! and Baidu search results, for instance -- this worked well enough, apart from an occasional delay of a few seconds before they were displayed. And Safego does a good job of filtering your Twitter and Facebook, although this is also available separately for free.
The antiphishing module is even better, adding strong real-time protection to IE, Firefox, Chrome, Safari, Opera and Yahoo! Messenger. And we do mean strong. We tested the program with malicious URLs from several sources and its lowest detection rate was 70%, very good in this field.
The headline new feature here is Safepay, though, an isolated and secure browser which should detect when you visit a banking or online shopping site, and pop up to continue the session, so ensuring your credit card details, account information or other sensitive data can’t easily be intercepted by anything else which might be running on your PC. And sure enough, in our tests it prevented a couple of commercial keyloggers from seeing anything of what we were doing online.
We had a small problem, in that Safepay didn’t always pop up automatically for us, even with sites which we thought might need protection (PayPal, eBay, Amazon). Which can easily be fixed -- you’re able to manually define URLs where you’d like it to appear, or you can just fire up Safepay just like any browser and visit wherever you like -- but it’s a little annoying.
And there’s a more fundamental issue in Safepay’s isolation. Launch the program and your desktop disappears, which means you can’t access other programs until your Safepay session is over. That’s great for keeping you safe, but it also means you won’t be able to use a password manager to log in, which may generate more security problems of its own.
On balance, though, Safepay represents a welcome addition to the package. And if it encourages Bitdefender to add an Identity Safe-like password manager to the suite in future builds, then so much the better.
Firewall, Anti-spam
If there’s one component where we really appreciate Bitdefender Internet Security 2013′s intelligence, it’s the firewall. You’re not left to drown in endless warnings about “svchost.exe” or whatever wants to go online, the program just handles everything itself, while also properly stealthing your PC’s ports to protect you from internet attacks.
We would question some of the firewall’s initial settings, though (its smart intrusion detection system is turned off by default, for instance – go to Settings > Firewall > Advanced to turn it on, so protecting you from the installation of malware drivers, amongst other things).
And configuring the firewall itself isn’t for the faint-hearted, as in places it can be a complex and far from intuitive process.
Elsewhere, the Internet Security 2013 spam filter integrated neatly with our Outlook 2010 setup, also with no intervention required. (And as it runs at the POP3 and SMTP protocol level, the program should work transparently with any standard email client.)
Its initial accuracy wasn’t great, though, with the program picking up only 136 out of 326 spam emails received over the test period (around 42%). Still, it also raised only a single false positive (a legitimate newsletter), and you can train the system over time to do better, so there is hope here – it’ll probably just take a little work.
And There’s More
Parental controls are usually one of the lesser features in most security suites, if they’re included at all, but Bitdefender clearly see things differently. The tools provided here can monitor your child’s Facebook activities, web browsing, instant messaging, perhaps even their location, instant messaging, SMS messages or phone calls (if they have an Android-based phone which you equip with the necessary app, anyway).
There are plenty of options to control the sites they visit, the applications they run, the times they can go online, and more. Or, if you prefer, you can take a more hands-off approach and just use the detailed reports to monitor what they’re doing.
Bitdefender still have plenty of work to do here. The system needs to be able to monitor iOS devices, for instance, and the instant messaging component also requires attention (right now it supports Yahoo! IM only). But it is shaping up well, and may already be sufficient for some people’s needs.
The other interesting addition in Bitdefender Internet Security 2013 is the USB Immunizer. Right-click a USB drive in Explorer, select Bitdefender > Immunize this drive, and the program will make it appear as though there’s an “autorun.inf” file on the drive already – so malware won’t be able to directly create its own.
Does it work? Yes. Well enough, anyway. There are ways around this -- reformatting the drive removes the protection, for instance, and malware could presumably also write to the file system directly to undo Bitdefender’s work -- but they’re not something the average autorun virus is going to do. And so, for the moment at least, the USB Immunizer does an effective job of protecting you from autorun viruses.
Bitdefender Internet Security 2013 isn’t the perfect security suite, then: it has a few issues, here and there. The program scores highly where it really counts, though; this release has some useful new features and improvements; and for all its functions, the suite remains very easy to use and has minimal impact on your system performance. It really could be a great security choice for everyone, from Windows experts to PC novices.
If the feature set doesn’t quite fit with your requirements, though, keep in mind that Bitdefender do have a couple of alternatives. Antivirus Plus 2013 combines the antivirus engine with Safepay, the USB Immunizer and plenty of browsing protection (antiphishing tool, Search Advisor, Safego and more); while Total Security 2013 has the full Internet Security feature set, and adds file encryption and shredding, a PC Tune-up component, and Anti-Theft, a service to help locate and recover lost or stolen computers. 30-day trial builds of both are available if you need them.
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Friday 31 August 2012

BEST ANTIMALWARE FULL VERSION NJOY


Malware Fighter screenshot

Verdict

Malware and spyware removal utility 
Review Rating: rating
Type: Free for personal use only
Platform: Windows Vista 64-bit, Windows 7, Windows 7 64-bit, Windows Vista, Windows XP
Manufacturer: IObit
Price: Free
This is the software publisher's description.
IObit Malware Fighter is an advanced malware and spyware removal utility that detects, removes the deepest infections and protects your PC from various potential spyware, adware, trojans, key-loggers, bots, worms and hijackers. With the improved, unique "dual-core" engine and the heuristic malware detection, IObit Malware Fighter detects the most complex and deepest spyware and malware in a very fast and efficient way.
Adopted with IObit's unique "dual-core" engine and improved program core structure, IObit Malware Fighter is now available for delivering more comprehensive and deeper system scan to find the deepest infections and finally remove or quarantine them, protecting your PC from more security threats and privacy compromises.
An intuitive and neat design was successfully brought to IObit Malware Fighter that provides you with four major entrances in the main interface, which lead you to the four major functions: Overview, Scan, Protect and Cloud. This brand new interface gives you an open-and-shut view with all the details.
IObit Malware Fighter provides you with anti-malware and real-time protection, including Startup Guard, Browser Guard, Network Guard, File Guard, Cookie Guard, Process Guard, USD Disk Guard and Malicious Action Guard, which keeps your computer stay secure all the time.
IObit Cloud uses the latest Cloud Computing technology and heuristic analysing mechanic to analyse the behaviour of spyware, adware, trojans, key-loggers, bots, worms, hijackers and other security-related risks in a fully automated mode.

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TuneUp Utilities 2012 Review

TuneUp Utilities 2012 claims to boost PC speed, increase stability and give you that new PC feeling.  The TuneUp computer optimization program is an extensive tool packed with over 30 utilities to give your PC more speed and stability.  It also is capable of extending the battery life of a laptop with the new TuneUp Economy mode.  Also improved in this release is the Program Deactivator that kills unnecessary programs to boost speed for processor intensive programs that are resource hungry. The Computer being used for this review of TuneUp 2012 is an older Dell D620 laptop running Windows Vista and powered with the Intel Core 2 T2700 processor and 2 Gigs of RAM.  Not too shabby in its day but the days have seemed to take some of the performance away.  Let’s see if TuneUp Utilities can breathe some new life into it and bring it back to its optimal performance.  This particular computer has a few issues that maybe this program can help with.  The boot time seems painfully slow and the C drive is dangerously low on disk space.  There are only 2.34 Gigabytes of free space and it boots up to a usable desktop in about 70 seconds.

 Here is a shot of the drive space available:

Drive Space available before running TuneUp Utilities

Here is the Task Manager 5 minutes into boot time after everything has settled down:

The Task Manager before optimization
The first screen you will see when launching TuneUp welcomes you to TuneUp Utilities and recommends that you use 1-Click Maintenance to fully optimize the PC.  There is a big button that says to Start Analysis now, so I clicked it. 
Welcome to TuneUp Utilities 2012
When it was done analyzing the computer, it shows a detailed analysis of the problems found and what is recommended to fix those problems.  You can also show the in depth details of everything found and choose not to fix those problems.  This screen shows that this PC has 263 Registry problems, 33 broken shortcuts, 7 recommendations to speed up the startup and shutdown process and can also free up almost 2 Gigabytes of space by deleting unnecessary files without damaging the system.  I can’t believe that it actually found 2 gigs to delete!  I have used this product in the past and I trust it so I smacked the Run Maintenance button.
Run Maintenance to fix problems
When it was done, it told me so.  I was given the option to go to the Start Center and this is what I found:
The TuneUp Utilities Start Center
As you can see, TuneUp Utilities 2012 shows that 43% of optimization progress is achieved at this time.  I have a few things that need my attention such as filling out the PC usage profile and 6 other problems were found.  I also can configure the Turbo and Economy modes and run the Program Deactivator.  After going through all of the recommendations, I was told that my Optimization Status is at 100% and at the present time I have extensively used the optimization options for this system.  That must be a good thing.   It was all pretty straightforward and only took a few minutes.
Your Optimization Status is 100%
You can also see an overview of all of the functions TuneUp Utilities can perform.  This screen allows you to customize Windows, Restore deleted files, Undo Changes made and configure everything available in the optimization program.  There are a lot of things to play with if you want to get geeky but still very easy to use as for the average computer user.
List view of all the functions available
A clean boot gave me a usable desktop in 1 minute flat.  That is 10 seconds quicker than before running the program.  The Windows Task Manager tells a bit of a story as well.  The system shows less Handles, Threads and Processes, a smaller Page File and more Free Physical Memory. 
The Task Manager after running TuneUp Utilities
This shows the drive space gained:
The Drive Manager after running TuneUp Utilities
TuneUp Utilities 2012 is an easy to use computer optimization utility with many tools to keep a computer fast and reliable.  Works good for the average user and has enough extra tools to keep the geeky side of us happy as well.  TuneUp works as it claims to, comes with a lot of extras and is fairly priced.  For those reasons, TuneUp Utilities 2012 gets an honorable Brontobyte on a scale from bytes to Brontobytes.  This is a recommended tool to have in your toolbox. 



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iobit-advancedsystemcare-antivirus

Verdict

Combining powerful system maintenance and optimisation tools, along with a powerful antivirus engine, this could be a useful tool in your arsenal.
Review Rating: rating
Type: Time limited demo
Platform: Windows 8 compatible, Windows Vista 64-bit, Windows 7, Windows 7 64-bit, Windows Vista, Windows XP
Manufacturer: IObit
Size: 60MB

Keep your system trouble-free with this dual system maintenance suite and antivirus tool.
Maintaining a consistently, smooth running computer isn’t as easy as you would imagine, there are so many issues that could affect the day-to-day use of your PC, which results in difficulties when identifying problems with your system. Another reason could be that it could be a number of different factors rather than one particular problem.
Advanced SystemCare with Antivirus is a comprehensive PC utility suite that will help you optimise and tweak your PC, then repair and protect it. This free utility is equipped with all the features needed to maintain a smooth running, error free PC with relative ease. The Antivirus component will help keep your system safe and secure and you can choose to install in "compatibility mode", alongside your existing security software, giving you a second layer of protection.
Everything you need is contained within the software, a spyware scanning tool, adware blocker, privacy tools and a variety of system scanners that enable you to find and fix invalid registry entries and clear temporary files. Another useful tool is the system restore that works in conjunction with XP’s own system restore utility.
The useful thing with this software is that you can provide your PC with all it needs from a maintenance perspective, and you don’t need to be overly computer literate to make use of it.


Installation Instructions:
1.Disconnect internet
2.Install Program.
3.Use Given serial To register 

Serial:94ABB-892A2-78B72-6DFD6

NJOY