✓ Accepted Answer
On beginners: the short answer is that it is more manageable than it looks, but it has specific requirements that catch people out when they are not expecting them.
The core thing to know: courses works best when you approach it systematically rather than opportunistically.
What to prioritise first: identify your actual constraints rather than assumed ones.
In practice this means testing your approach on a local environment before moving to production.
Watch out for: watch out for breaking changes between major versions. This is the most common source of friction people encounter with beginners after the initial setup.
Realistic timeline: a month of consistent engagement to build real confidence.
by alialmalik82755
Removing a virus properly involves a few steps. First, download Malwarebytes — the free version is excellent and specifically designed to catch what regular antivirus misses. Run a full scan, let it quarantine everything it finds, then restart.
Next, check your browser extensions. Go to your browser settings and look at installed extensions. Remove anything you don't recognise. Malware frequently hides as fake extensions that redirect your searches and inject ads.
Check your startup programs. On Windows press Ctrl+Shift+Esc to open Task Manager, go to the Startup tab, and disable anything unfamiliar. Malware often adds itself here to survive reboots.
After cleaning, change passwords for your important accounts from a different device or after you're confident the infection is gone. Keyloggers can capture passwords if they were active during removal.
As prevention going forward: avoid downloading cracked software, be careful with email attachments, and keep Windows and your antivirus updated.
by chidiadeniyi92133
· 6 upvotes