That would be Not My Sandbox Syndrome, a label I'll ascribe here to a psychological reluctance to mess with things not of one's own creation. It came up recently in some conversations that I don't "run" much on FurryFaire. A couple scenes in sequence with very little plotline and involving only a PC or two? Sure, I do that maybe a couple times a week. Any longer continuity, any wider influence on the setting, and I pretty much skip it. Why? A lot of reasons, actually, some of which I may discuss in most depth later. Inspiration is fleeting and fickle - I can't just conjure up applicable ideas at will, but its easier to manage in this area if there are other things going on to play off of. Time can be tricky - I have had numerous scenes fall by the wayside because when I was interested in pursuing them people weren't around or something else required my attention. My GMing skills, especially online, have waned - I have enough trouble wrangling two or ...
We upgraded to Symantec Endpoint Protection and use a central server to manage antivirus/antispyware/antiroguemalware definitions and program settings, so no-one can change them (except IT). It is much much better at malware/spyware than previous versions of Symantec Antivirus, and has a firewall component. Really, it's what the product should've been all along. I leverage that technology with this message to all employees: "We have software that detects all malicious software and viruses and it will never inform you. It will inform me. Therefore, any notification you see about your computer having viruses is bogus, and if you see such a notification and are in doubt, call me. Otherwise, close your programs and restart your computer if you see such a notification. Or if you can't, call me." Of course, I also get management weight behind me to enforce a 'no admin rights' policy too and the combination is very effective. But you've already mentioned your legacy program issues in that regard. Good luck. Lately I've been finding the best course in the last few years is to just pull the HDD, put in another one and rebuild from scratch. When rebuilt, copy data from old HDD to new HDD. The stuff now just is buried so deep it's too hard to clean out and I'm sure you don't care to be an expert on the subject either - that probably implies waaaay too much time spent on it.
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