When I switch to meter broadband mode, how often does Norton checks for an update? And what updates are pulled? I am assuming all updates other than the pulse updates are pulled.
There are settings in Metered Broadband Mode that let you select a preference - no limit, critical updates only, or no traffic at all:
SendOfJive wrote:There are settings in Metered Broadband Mode that let you select a preference - no limit, critical updates only, or no traffic at all:
I know but the help document is extremely vague and unclear.
Anybody? Can someone answer?
mikedov wrote:Anybody? Can someone answer?
NIS12 Product Manual PDF has info re Metered Broadband Mode (see pages 297-300)
May not answer your query....but, may help.
Cheers
mikedov wrote:I know but the help document is extremely vague and unclear.
Have you clicked on the red links at the bottom of the first page of the document?
mikedov wrote:Anybody? Can someone answer?
Hi mikedov,
The manual as bjm inidcated does go into a bit more detail. The setting of "Critical Updates Only" is going to apply to any virus definitions and other definition or product updates which relate directly to the security of your computer. E.g., things which would be left out (not updated) would be for example fixes having to do with UI (user interface) issues or any other update which does not actually relate to the security of your computer.
Obviously the Symantec server will determine which category each update falls into but the above are the guideline which will be used to flag each update as critical or not.
If you do have an unlimited broadband connection you should not need to configure it for any of the restricted settings.
Hope this helps.
Best wishes.
Allen
Hi mikedov:
Symantec employee michaell posted details here in Jerry20's thread Disabling All Idletime Activity about Norton tasks that run if users choose "Critical Updates Only" vs. "No Traffic" with the new Metered Bandwidth feature. Hope this is what you're looking for.
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Windows Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP2 * NIS 2011 v. 18.6.0.29 * IE 9.0 * Firefox 7.0.1
HP Pavilion dv6835ca, Intel Core2Duo CPU T5550 @ 1.83 GHz, 3.0 GB RAM, NVIDIA GeForce 8400 GS
Also, Automatic LiveUpdate checks for updates once an hour.
you know if you really wanted to make your life alot easier then I would just buy a router that has bandwidth meters built in. I know Netgear has this option on all of it's routers. I know that it's a lot easyer to configure and setup then trying to get something like norton to count. and if you have a lot of none PC items like a Xbox or Ipad or Mobile phone like I do they can add up every single bite that goes out the door. Nortons not going to count that traffic, I don't think. also make sure you understand if your isp is watching for uploading too. don't just count downloads.
Just my two cents on the subject.
jarrycanada wrote:you know if you really wanted to make your life alot easier then I would just buy a router that has bandwidth meters built in. I know Netgear has this option on all of it's routers. I know that it's a lot easyer to configure and setup then trying to get something like norton to count. and if you have a lot of none PC items like a Xbox or Ipad or Mobile phone like I do they can add up every single bite that goes out the door. Nortons not going to count that traffic, I don't think. also make sure you understand if your isp is watching for uploading too. don't just count downloads.
Just my two cents on the subject.
Hi jarrycanada,
I don't believe the BW meters on the router by itself solves the issue. That gives you great monitoring capability so you can see what your usage looks like but the purpose of this setting in Norton is to minimize the amount of updates retrieved. This functionality cannot be replaced by the router.
Best wishes.
Allen
Also, if I am tethering the computer, a bandwidth controling router is useless