![]() ![]() Lastly, it is a hog when you have most of the protections running and as a result I don't have any machine running under 8GB of RAM, but you can get away with 4GB. Can be super useful and you can even create tasks against those groups (such as an update task) so that it's easier to deploy software updates. It lets you create lists of computers based on search criteria such as "Which computer have Java version 8.x installed?" or "Which computers have the anniversary update". Along with that, figure out how to use "Computer Selections". I've been able to deploy updates to Java and Adobe as well as some of our business apps and it does it silently without user interaction. Their deployment tools are great, we use it as an alternative to Group Policy and PDQ Deploy. ![]() ![]() If you're using their application start-up or control protection features, be sure you add your business applications as exceptions before you enable it, otherwise you'll have hell to pay very shortly. Use their knowledge base and go through their best practice guides. The security center has a learning curve to get the most out of it. I've seen in clean and keep most things tidy. It seems to do it's job keeping the viruses out. We've had Kaspersky in our environment for 4 years now. ![]()
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