Gnosis said:I like Comodo for forcing things shut. I like Process Hacker II for its services tab and interface; easy to read and view.
Who makes System Explorer? I have never heard of it.
No one is mentioning XueTr, A.K.A. PCHunter. It gives you a lot of intel that the others spoken of cannot.
Now that I have gone there, I will go so far as to say that PCHunter would run circles around all of 'em, esp. when considering the mass intel that PCHunter relays.
Littlebits said:A lot of you are young and think Killswitch is a new idea, this technology has been around for many years, Comodo is the last to implement it.
Littlebits said:When Comodo released KillSwitch everyone was acting like won what a excellent new product, I'm thinking to myself where have they been, another process monitor? these kind of products have been out since the start of 2000. A lot of them are no longer in development.
HeffeD said:Littlebits said:A lot of you are young and think Killswitch is a new idea, this technology has been around for many years, Comodo is the last to implement it.
I would be extremely surprised if anyone here thought it was a new idea...
Littlebits said:When Comodo released KillSwitch everyone was acting like won what a excellent new product, I'm thinking to myself where have they been, another process monitor? these kind of products have been out since the start of 2000. A lot of them are no longer in development.
:huh:
I had a jaw drop moment when I read the comment I've highlighted.
It's a good thing most software developers (or even the general public) don't think like you, or the software industry would stagnate and we would never progress!
Software Developer: An operating system? Those have been around since the 60's! Why do we need another one of them?
Software End User: I'm not going to use a new AV. The Atari ST version of G Data that I bought in 1987 is more than adequate for my needs!
People always get excited about new products. It doesn't matter whether or not it's a new idea. (And I think it's a gross generalization to assume that people who are excited about something feel it's a new idea...) Look at all the new posts each new iteration of an AV product brings. AV's are nothing new, they've been around since the late 80's. And more often than not, the product itself isn't even new. It's just a newer version of an existing product.
I welcome any and all versions of any type of product.
Littlebits said:There nothing wrong with software evolving with technology but when a new product comes out which is an exact copy of what is already available with no new original or updated features that is not nothing to get excited about. KillSwitch offers nothing new or original, except for the fact it manages to use a ton of resources to do simple tasks. I guess you could call that new.
HeffeD said:Littlebits said:There nothing wrong with software evolving with technology but when a new product comes out which is an exact copy of what is already available with no new original or updated features that is not nothing to get excited about. KillSwitch offers nothing new or original, except for the fact it manages to use a ton of resources to do simple tasks. I guess you could call that new.
Interesting then that they've applied for patents on some of the technology. That's tough to do on exact copies of existing products.![]()
Littlebits said:Applying for patents and actually getting patents are not the same.
Littlebits said:I see they did get their patent for Comodo Autoruns which was released much latter then KillSwitch, however KillSwitch is still pending for some reason or other. Whether that raises your eyebrows or not, it dosen't seem logical that a product developed much later already has a patent then one that was developed first. It is because they are still having problems with copyrights on the technology. After they fork over some cash to copyright owners, I'm sure they will get their patent for KillSwitch.
Littlebits said:Just because a product has a patent, doesn't mean they developed all the technology inside, sometimes developers will buy or lease technology and still can get a patent on their product if they include a disclaimer.
McLovin said:Geez, by looking at what Littlebits provided, Process Explorer uses the less the the actual Windows Task Manager.
ProcessExplorer, good and stable software from reputable source.
I would never choose any Comodo product - in my eyes this is shady company, AFAIK KillSwitch was made on Process Hacker sources violating open source license..