I voted to bring back both the pause button and stats since you can’t really tell if the scan is frozen or not. If a user does see stats moving, they know the scan is running. Currently it stats stuck at 0% for a while (which is when rootkit scan is running and will be fixed in a future release) but at this moment of time, it seems the scan is frozen.
I wouldn’t be so sure of that… yesterday on the Slack channel and I quote “it won’t be possible to pause it” in regards to pausing the scans. The reason why I created the poll. The stats for the scans is more likely to be back (in some aspects) rather than pause currently.
Even so I can’t see a poll making that much difference there have been many polls in the past that change very little.
Personally I feel on-demand scans are somewhat redundant in a resident on-access antivirus. I generally only run them for beta testing and in relation to forum questions.
Well my previous poll on VPS notifications did make some difference. In the future, when the computer starts up, there will be a notification that Avast is running. I can see Polls making a difference in some cases and not in others. I do agree that on-demand scans are getting redundant but they still have their purposes.
That’s the problem, unless you get direct input in the poll topic by avast you will never know if it was their intention to bring it back or not.
I’m not sure what you mean about VPS Notifications having made a difference. As your comment “when the computer starts up, there will be a notification that Avast is running” doesn’t seem related to VPS at all, related to the avast tray icon perhaps, but not VPS.
The reason for a “pause” button is for those who do run scans on a regular basis.
I run a full system scan each week before making my weekly system image.
Redundancy is there for a reason. Better safe than sorry.
Redundancy is all well and good, as I have mentioned on many occasions on-demand scans will be scanning (for the most part) files that are inert or dormant. If they were active, then they would get scanned by the on-access shields.
In between weekly scans all active files that are a target or present a risk are scanned, so if one of the inert/dormant files suddenly becomes active/unpacked, then it/they would be scanned.
I Voted for Pause, Stats, as who knows might wanna pause a on demand scan if I’m running one before my System image for some reason, though I normally don’t run too many on demand scans, except during betas if I test any, and to check something if need to.
Usually One on demand scan after clean install for me, then rest of the time just like real time protection do the protection