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Solve : Can I virus scan D: drive?? |
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Answer» I added a new drive (D: ) to my desktop for some extra space & wanted to scan it for viruses, but all of the ones I have used only scan the C: drive. The OP's question should probably be "How do I scan a particular drive with XXX antivirus?" After seeing the McAfee Youtube Rant Video, featuring John McAfee himself with adult humor ... you have to WONDER if he would make a XXX Antivirus... sorry if I derailed this... but seeing XXX Antivirus gave me a flashback of that youtube video that I had a laugh at. Surprised the content filter didnt pick up on XXX and censor it. Probably would be best to go with: Quote The OP's question should probably be "How do I scan a particular drive with [ Antivirus Name Here ]?"Quote from: DaveLembke on October 19, 2013, 04:15:19 PM Surprised the content filter didnt pick up on XXX and censor it. I guess that's a joke; a content filter replaces actual profanity with placeholders such as Xs or hyphens or asterisks; those things are not themselves profane. XXXXXXThanks for the replies. I think DaveLembke has a valid point. I have SAS and MalwareBytes (free) on my desktop computer as well as MSE to name a few. HJT etc. etc. Oh and yes I found MSE does have that option (thanks Salmon Trout). I wanted to give the drive a thorough going over. Im (reasonably) sure I had the drive installed when I tried to virus scan it. Adding the drive has come about from other issues on this computer. Ultimately I think it was a flat battery in the motherboard. 2 beeps at startup, cannot find SATA 0, slow to load Windows past the blue screen, so on. So I am going through the system bit by bit and decided to add another drive. However I suspect the C: drive may actually be ready to fail. (That might be a different posting later)? Back to the question yes I tried to look around on the Antivirus scan on SAS & MalwareBytes, but Im (reasonably) sure/unsure I had the drive installed when I tried to virus scan it. I guess I will just have to step back for a minute and start at the beginning to make sure I am doing it all right and fix 1 issue at a time.Quote from: ImnoGuru on October 19, 2013, 09:30:55 PM ..., but Im (reasonably) sure/unsure ....So, which is it, sure or unsure? Quote from: ImnoGuru on October 19, 2013, 09:30:55 PM Im (reasonably) sure I had the drive installed when I tried to virus scan it. Reasonably sure or definitely sure, or completely unsure, if you didn't have it installed, you definitely wouldn't have been able to scan it. Quote from: Salmon Trout on October 20, 2013, 10:58:03 AM Reasonably sure or definitely sure, or completely unsure, if you didn't have it installed, you definitely wouldn't have been able to scan it.Somebody has done some editing. All right.. Now I am CONFIDENT that I did actually have it installed when I did the scan. I know this because I just tried it again. and it failed. So into "my computer" and it is not there too? Even after I rebooted just to make sure? Ok lets try this again. At first I thought it was the ram, then considered a Windows problem. Then this computer came up with the 2 beeps and a sloooow start. So I changed the battery & added the new drive. I added the new drive to the wrong connection SATA 0 INSTEAD of 1 and it was seen as the master. (So the drive works and is recognized. It also has Win XP on it.) I think I found why my computer did not scan this drive. Going through the BIOS, I found the settings for a second (slave) drive was switched to "Off", for a better term. Now I have it as "Auto". So lets see if that makes a difference.Now thats a lot better. I have been able to scan the other drive and removed all threats that were indicated. Since then I have done several other scans after going on the net and removed any threats that presented. My conclusion is; that the original problem was more than just the wrong connection and potentially the battery was failing simultaneously. Having removed the battery (IMHO) the bios reset to accept only the master. Quote from: Allan on October 19, 2013, 03:54:33 AM All AV's allow you to select the drives to scan to the best of my knowledge.Also I found that all the AV's (that I have on my computer) are selectable as to what drive to scan. Now on to the next problem for me then. This computer doesnt have any conflicts, yet is slow to boot into Windows. So I am going to try to upgrade the memory from 2 gig to 3 or 4 gig to see if it performs better. As for scanning problem fixed. Thanks everyone. |
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