

Then he connected me with his "supervisor" or "manager" at a company called TechLiveConnect that appeared to be in India, and when this "supervisor/mannager" got on line with me, they proceeded to try selling me additional "necessary" software for another $300.00. However, when he got into my computer, he burrowed around in it, and informed me that I had 10 problems that were slowing it down, and that he could fix them for $30.00 each. Apparently one of your students accessed my home computer today using the remote access capability under the pretext that he was going to activate a program for Auslogics Software in Sydney, Australia (they have 15,000,000 customers). Pardon me if I'm not addressing the right person, but I'm trying to determine if your UIS.edu remote access system can be used for commercial purposes. Why would an University in Illinois sponsor the activation of programs by an Australian company when all the work and charges would be going to TechLiveConnect which appears to be in India and the payments are going through Avangate in the Netherlands? Does not make sense?Īnyway following is a message that I wrote to the Univ of Illinois: However later, I HAD to write to the University of Illinois at Springfield to question this transaction. Turned out his remote access program was UIS.edu which I did not give it much thought at the time. I figured if it's from Auslogics that has 15,000,000 customers, what could go wrong? Did so and the tech rep wanted to "remote enter into my computer to do so". If you wanna boosted system ffs.!! Get a water cooled Case, 10Tb RAM, The "mother" of all Motherboards, TI's SysBIOS, Tot/range CPU, 10 chassis fans,Ī fire Extinguisher, A large Beer, & join the OverClockers Club.Bought a program from Auslogics and they sent e-mail for me to call a number to activate the program. For efforts to sell Bull to the Unwitting.Īs for the "sell" word: MAINTAIN. ANY app that can Boost, Optimize, Tweak etc. & in other cases as Freeware incl T/Bars & O/candy. These types of apps which Boost/Tweak systems are in fact, A combination of the above mentioned "clearing out" method plus tons of system registry tweaks, which are then compiled into a Snazzy UI, and sold for $£*


In fact, Learn the registry & do your own tweaks. Your Registry can use a clearout once in a while, & maybe a Defrag as well. What is it that draws users to all this crap.? You can keep your system Tip-Top by clearing out temp-files, History-files, SoftwareDistribution files, & running cleanmgr.exe daily.
