Faronics Deep Freeze 662 Download

Thing that caught my interest about DeepFreeze is that it restores your system settings every reboot.which seems a very easy way to keep your system clean and running smoothly. Just don't know how easy it is to add new programs, or change settings that you may want to change down the track. Ustrojstvo i princip raboti uzlov i agregatov teplovoza 2te10m in the world. Had a quick look at the other two, which seemed more of a 'choose your last restore point/favoured restore point'.which seems a little more complicated. Click to expand.Hello Vikorr, I use Deep Freeze.

It's not an anti-________ program, ie, it doesn't check or stop anything from getting into the system, it just restores the system to it's last reboot state. Any changes made to the system will be not be around on reboot. I avoid using the term remove, or erase, because that implies the program works in a virtual image, or snap shot, which it doesn't.

Another program which does use that technique is ShadowUser. I would do a lot of reading on both Deep Freeze and ShadowUser before deciding. Deep Freeze was designed for institutions - schools, libraries, etc, so that no one could alter the system. No matter what you do, the system reboots to its previous state. Great for computer labs where students like to try and trash the computer - modify files in Windows, etc. No matter, it always restores to previous state on reboot.

If a virus or trojan gets by your anti-_________ product, DF will restore it w/o those attacks. To add software, you put Deep Freeze into its thawed state, install, reboot, then put back into Frozen state. It's not as flexible as ShadowUser, where you can commit/discard changes in the 'virtual image' you are working in.

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Download Faronics Deep Freeze Enterprise 6.62.220.3058 Full *pkaji123* torrent or any other torrent from Applications > Windows Direct download via magnet. Faronics DeepFreeze Enterprise 7.10.220.

DF doesn't allow any of that, so this is something to consider. But you can see why, since it's used in schools, etc, and needs to have tighter control. With DF you need at least two partitions - one that will be in thawed state for your data files. C: will be frozen to protect the OS. As such, if you use folders like My Documents, etc they will have to be remapped to a thawed partition. Not a big problem with TweakUI. It's a bit of a hassle for home use, but you can see how it's ideal for institutional use where few changes are made to C: If the home user doesn't do a lot of installing of programs, etc - which is my case - then it's not such a hassle.

I first saw it in action at the community college where I work and was thorougly impressed. I spent about a week figuring out on paper how I would set things up. I also considered SU, but ended up with DF because I think it's more bulletproof. That or SU are great as the last line in the defense. Search these forums for Deep Freeze and ShadowUser - There is a long thread on DF from a while back, and you'll get lots of different opinions.

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Also, I would go to the web sites for those products and read about them - both products have technical white papers you can download. For ShadowUser- ShadowStor is the parent company: For Deep Freeze, Faronics is the parent company: They are not for the faint-of-heart. They need a lot of study and consideration, but well worth the effort, IMHO. Regards, -rich. I use Deep Freeze too. Rmus has covered most of the stuff about it. One extra thing I like about it is that you can install a program and give it a try out.

If you don't like it or it screws up the machine, you just reboot and it's gone. No registry entries or other spurious files are left behind. If you want to keep it, reboot (thaw), install, reboot (freeze). My daughter plays a few games. These need to be installed on a partition that you do not freeze, otherwise you can't save where you are up to. It's also a bit of a pain undating AV's because you need to remember to reboot (thaw), update, reboot (freeze).