System Restore is the ideal solution if you can't get rid of the virus with a virus scanner or your system, has developed other software problems.Originally posted by Xero Grid@7 February 2004 - 04:28
I STRONGLY recommend not using system restore. Any waste of code virus can copy itself to the system restore information folder (of which you can't get into ) and be in who knows what file, especially when the virus is found and removed by ANY anti-virus. Thsi is why you should disable system restore, restart, clean your system, reboot, scan to be sure (like a detailed complete scan in AVG 7.0) and re-enable system restore. Any virus can be restored if system restore is even simply still running, much less using it to try to get rid of it.
System restore isn't even needed by most users, unless you're testing software, especially beta software. Shutting off system restore and shutting off the service will actually make your system run much faster, of course depending on hadware.
-- Xero Grid --
It will store the virus within the restore information, but if you go back to before when the virus was downloaded and then deactivate the restore settings it will get rid of the virus from the system and also the restore information of the virus.
You have to be pretty short sighted to completely deactivate system restore when so many problems can occur with your pc, that the only other solution (to system restore) would be a reformat of the hard drive.
In fact if you carried out a survey of all the problems that had developed with the system (software based) that people have been complaining about in this forum, the vast majority of them could be resolved by using system restore. There is far too much ignorance about this very useful feature of windows.
It takes only a few minutes to restore a system and saves hours (in many cases days) of annoyance.
EDIT: System restore gets rid of all files that were downlaoded after the restore date, that can cause harm to your system.
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