When I try to scan the computer, I get the error message "Norton AntiVirus was unable to scan your computer for infections because you have not yet accepted this product's End User License Agreement (EULA).". There were no warnings that a renewal was necessary, and the start of the problem did not correspond with a new update or installation.
LiveUpdate and Live Chat both claim there is no room on the hard drive for them to operate, and the defrag utility has a similar complaint, but the timing of the problem does not correspond with the installation of a new program. I am therefore concerned that this is indicative of something else being wrong, such as a worm, and am anxious to scan. If there is another problem, I'm afraid any hard drive space I clear will just fill up again, so I would like to be able to run a scan before taking measures like that.
How do I accept the EULA and get my Norton to scan? The installation wizard does NOT come up when I reboot the computer.
Please advise operating system and Norton product. How much hard disk space is available? Sounds like too little and you cannot run a computer with insufficient hard disk space.
Under My Computer, 119 megabytes are supposed to be available on C. Nothing was uploaded right before the computer started complaining everything was full, and this computer is not used for gaming or anything-it doesn't seem to make sense that it would be full all of a sudden like this.
Under My Computer, 119 megabytes are supposed to be available on C. Nothing was uploaded right before the computer started complaining everything was full, and this computer is not used for gaming or anything-it doesn't seem to make sense that it would be full all of a sudden like this.
119 MEGABYTES Iis really very little. You need to bear in mind that pagefile.sys is an expanding system file and that alone could account for the drive suddenly being full.
We occasionally get reports of Norton 2006 Virus Definitions files filling up hard drives, so that may be contributing to your issue. Antivirus programs built in 2006 were designed to accomodate a handful of new virus definitions every week. In 2011, there are hundreds or even thousands of new definitions released every day. Newer programs are designed to efficiently handle this volume - your program is not. You should follow CyberLife's advice to update to the latest version, if your computer meets the minimum system requirements.
- Upgrade to Norton 2011 only if your computer have the necessary system requirements for Norton 2011(You can upgrade only if you have Windows XP Service Pack 2 or later with atleast 300MB of free diskspace)