Last week I received an email from Symantec’s PR Firm, telling me about the new Norton Internet Security 2009. Being fed up with Symantec and their bloated ways over the past couple of years, I normally would have just hit delete.

But before I could hit delete something caught my eye. “Fastest install — Norton Internet Security 2009 installs in only 52 seconds” I immediately said BULL SHIT, who the heck does Symantec think they are trying to fool, no way in HELL does Norton Internet Security 2009 install in under 52 seconds no way in hell does it install in under 20 minutes. I called a few people up and we laughed at that claim.

So after I was done laughing I decided I needed to put it to the test, and make Symantec look like a big liar, so I requested a copy of Norton Internet Security 2009, and over the weekend while I waited for it I joked with a few guys who I know that are network admins and they laughed at the claim too. One of them even said “It will probably ruin your system in under 52 seconds they mean”.

But as the saying goes, he who laughs last laughs the hardest. I hear Symantec laughing really hard right now. I am embarrassed to report that Norton Internet Security 2009 installed on my system in less than 1 minute, in fact if my stop watch was correct it installed in less than 50 seconds. So Symantec I take back all the crap I have said about you guys over the past few years.

It installed so fast that I thought I might of not installed it correctly, so I installed it on a second machine and again it installed in under a minute.

So yes, Symantec you are correct when you say it will install in 52 seconds, but the outrageous and so far true claims do not end there. They also claim it uses less than 7MB of memory.

I again found that hard to believe when previous versions of Norton were known for using as much memory as your system could spare. But Norton literally is only using right now on my system 4 MB of memory, and get this not even 1% of the CPU.

I am simply blown away; in fact I am in love with Norton now and probably will recommend it to everyone and their mama, after years of recommending the free version of AVG which is bloated to hell and the free version of avast which confuses the crap out of a lot of novice users, I guess I will start throwing in a recomendation for Norton now. There is a saying, you pay for quality. Well when it came to AV Software that saying in my opinion did not apply until now.

I just ran a virus quick scan and it took 45 seconds, windows one care takes nearly 2 hours to do a quick scan on my system, and I like that the virus definitions are updated every 30 seconds or so automatically so you have the latest up to the minute protection.

Here are some screen shots from the installation of Norton Internet Security 2009.


Norton Screen 1

Screen 2

Screen 3

Screen 4

Screen 5

Norton Internet Security 2009

It installed so fast that my fingers weren’t fast enough to catch a few of the screens. The longest part of the installation was activating it and that just took 5 seconds.

To get your copy and for more information visit Symantec.

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Post Tags: review  software  symantec  norton internet security 2009  norton 


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Comments: (12)
Chris on Mon, Sep 15th, 2008 at 08:59 PM

I will have to try this my self.


Broady on Tue, Sep 16th, 2008 at 11:18 AM

it installed in a little over a minute for me. But what ever happened to the 30 day trial? They are just offering 15 days for this.


Michael on Tue, Sep 16th, 2008 at 11:45 AM

Instead of updating my post.

I’ve installed the software on 4 additional systems 2 desktops 2 noteboks (tablet and regular notebook)

the notebooks it took about 1 minute and 30 secnds each, the two other desktops were $299 systems and on one it installed in 2 minutes (bogged down system) the other was new and it installed in about one minute.

The system


Anthony on Tue, Sep 16th, 2008 at 07:20 PM

Unbelieveable! I will have to try this as well!


Michael on Tue, Sep 16th, 2008 at 11:49 PM
Spyw on Fri, Sep 19th, 2008 at 10:15 PM

Wow that is pretty impressive.  I have always had respect for Norton Antivirus but like you mentioned it just was way too slow and took up a TON of virtual memory for me to use it on a regular basis.  I switched to Online Armor which runs a little quieter.  But after reading this I may have to jump back on the Norton bandwagon.  Good stuff.


JT on Tue, Sep 23rd, 2008 at 03:48 PM

Less than a minute. It’s true.


Orgu on Wed, Oct 08th, 2008 at 06:20 AM

Thanks, Brandon, and great to hear from you. Hope your business is thriving up in Oregon (with or without gold-ups).


Alex on Thu, Oct 16th, 2008 at 12:01 PM

Hey, thanks for the review - but I need to know one thing: is it worth switching over to NIS2009 from Avast Personal (free version)?  I’m trying to find some objective points to consider.  For some reason, I’m not really all that interested in the lenght of time it takes to install (although it is a nice thing) - I just really don’t want to fall back into the Norton propaganda trap which has resulted in some disasters in the past.  Any comments, suggestions would be greatly appreciated!  Thx!


Roland on Fri, Oct 17th, 2008 at 02:46 PM

We’d also need a security test.


http://www.experl.com on Mon, Oct 27th, 2008 at 09:08 AM

Unbelieveable! I will have to try this as well!

http://www.experl.com


Doug Embrey on Mon, Oct 27th, 2008 at 09:45 PM

I have a modern computer with power. I bought their NIS2009 and paid for the $59 tech to tweak my computer and the free install 49 days before my regular annual renewal.
Canadian Techs were friendly, polite and spoke English clearly.
The first tech Meryl, after about two of tuning my computer, suddenly hung up the phone, and the dialog box stated she passed my case to Sean. 4 hours later, Sean figured out he had to eliminate my Norton Systemworks for NIS2009 to work. 6 1/2 hours total. He politedly read my performance report card and was about to shut off the conversation, when I asked him when he was giving me back my Systemworks. He then became a deaf-mute. He did mumble that his supervisor told him to eliminate SWorks.
3 years ago they did this with another program. I thought this might signal a culture change...........an improved security program with techs that were’nt from Bimini or Cambodia that could communicate.
I lost 6 hours my law practice was shut down and my systemworks, with no offer to provide another utility program.
Culture change? Same old Norton, tell and sell you anything, with no warnings up front. They wonder why they get sued. How can one trust them?


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