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ANYONE WHOSE workstation has ever been attacked by a computer virus realizes how important it is to protect against such invasions. But for network managers, promoting proactive computer hygiene among end-users can present quite a dilemma: You have to either count on individual users to police their own machines or go through the labor-intensive and time-consuming task of visiting each client PC to manually check for viruses.
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for Windows NT Server offers a solution to this problem, enabling you to manage virus protection on an enterprisewide basis by installing, configuring, updating, and removing Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit applications on all Windows 95, NT, and Windows for Workgroups 3.11 workstations in an anti-virus domain.
Enterprise-scale control
Anti-virus domains, the organizational model in Toolkit for NT Server, are logical collections of NT, Win95, and Windows for Workgroups machines. Because there is no limit to the number of machines in an anti-virus domain, you can manage your pool of workstations in one domain, divide them into several domains, or follow the structure of any Windows network domains already in place.
Domains are created via Toolkit's Management Console, which also controls the installation and configuration of anti-virus components on machines in the anti-virus domain.
The first time the Management Console is run, you choose a location for the Repository- a...