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As said, installing new N360 is likely to have replaced the functions in older NSW.
But I have read here in relation to NIS and NSW that if you install NIS first and then do a selective (custom) installation of NSW you can install some of the Norton Utilities that are not in NIS so the same may be true for N360.
You could try that, depending on which part of NSW you want.
Keep an eye open here for other comments.
DaveShack wrote:When upgrading to 360 v2 from NIS+NSW, I didn't expect to lose access to the functions I liked in SystemWorks.
Moving to N360 after having NIS + NSW is NOT an upgrade. N360 is a sweet program, non intrusive for an average user and provides lots of protection. Norton Save and Restore(from NSW premier) is so much better than the backup from N360. NIS and NSW can have conflicts mainly the NAV so if you like the System Utilities (who doesn't?) then install NIS and then custom install NSW.
When upgrading to 360 v2 from NIS+NSW, I didn't expect to lose access to the functions I liked in SystemWorks.
For example, the defragmenter in NSW was the old style "Norton Utilities" type which showed the detail map of what was being moved. There were also ways to see what programs and services are running, and enable and disable startup procs.
Where is the equivalent function in this supposedly newer and better upgraded program? It refuses to let me reinstall NSW, saying "you have 360 which provides the same functions". I see the idea of making things simpler for "ordinary" users who only want to know they are protected, but what about power users like me who actually use the now-missing functions?
How do I get to the missing stuff?
The answer to your questions are you cant. Norton 360 is what it is by design. It can defragment your drives as part of Disk Optimization but you cannot make changes like important files at front of disk or not, or see the map of progress. I think you now realise this already. Norton 360 is not designed in my opinion to be a power users toolbox but then again the old functions and days of DOS and WIndows 95 are long gone and the Norton utilities available then have not been maintained or advanced; for example disk edit went a long time ago. I know this does not help you but what else can one say.
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