How does avast! look like on different operating systems?

Hi people! :slight_smile:

While reading through the forum I noticed that I never saw any picture or screenshot from an avast! Mac- or Linux- or PDA- or Server-Edition…
So I tried to search via Google, but couldn’t find much… the pictures all had bad quality…
I added the pictures I found.

Possibly someone can confirm that these are the real User Interfaces of avast! on these OS.
Or even post an more up-to-date screenshot. :slight_smile:

Its too bad that there are no pictures on the avast! homepage… at least I couldn’t find them… :-\

yours
onlysomeone

I have never saw the Mac one… the others are known (Linux, PDA and server).
I have avast Pro, Linux and PDA version, besides Bart CD :wink:

-= The avast server looks very professional… :smiley:

http://www.wilderssecurity.com/showpost.php?p=1147603

Here are some screenshots I posted some time ago of the linux version.

off topic: onlysomone, what car is that on your picture, and where can i se a big pic of it?

Its the Citroen GT. :wink:

You can find many pictures via Google…
Here’s one small gallery for example. :slight_smile:

I already have one of these good looking citroen`s…Citoen Berlingo ;D ;D ;D

That is the Avast mac interface :slight_smile:

Thank you for the confirmation! :slight_smile:

Also I found (in an other topic) that ther are some pictures of the Windows Home-Server edition on the avast-homepage.
You can find them here: http://www.avast.com/eng/screenshots-avast-wwindows-home-server.html

yours
onlysomeone

A comment on your avast! Linux screenshot, and I offer a tip to Ubuntu users…

If a person is using the desktop version of Ubuntu, or one of it’s derivatives, and their avast! screen looks like the one above, then the theme they’re using, isn’t theming the root applications (Synaptic, Login Window, Software Sources, etc).

If a person chooses to, that can be fixed, by entering the following, one at a time, at the command prompt…

sudo ln -s ~/.themes /root/.themes
sudo ln -s ~/.icons /root/.icons
sudo ln -s ~/.fonts /root/.fonts

(It’s a bit more complicated to theme the root applications in some other distros, but it’s easily done there too. Post, if you’d like me to comment on that further…)