Many of the drawings include happy people, clearly pleased to have Avast’s protection. The user interface is very similar across all platforms, with light-colored background, rounded buttons, and a pleasant, airy feel.Įverywhere you look there are line drawings, enlivened with daubs of pastel colors.
Both those dark themes are gone in Avast One. Where Avast’s previous products for Windows used a dark gray background, the macOS products went for a rich purple.
Intego works on 10.9 (Mavericks) or higher, while ProtectWorks goes all the way back to 10.8 (Mountain Lion). At the other end of the spectrum, a few antivirus tools still support ancient macOS versions for those who can’t (or won’t) upgrade. Kaspersky wants 10.14 (Mojave), and Avira requires 10.15 (Catalina). Most Mac owners keep the OS up to date, so that shouldn’t be a problem.
Norton security mac pending install#
To install Avast One you’ll need a Mac running macOS 10.13 (High Sierra). Avast One’s pricing is in line with comparable products. With Norton, which costs $5 more, you also get five full VPN licenses, as well as 50GB of storage for your (Windows) backups. Your subscription gets you a broad range of protection including five no-limits VPN licenses. Note, though, that Clario and Intego charge the same for just three licenses. At first glance, Avast One’s price of $99.99 per year for five licenses might seem expensive. You pay $59.99 for Kaspersky, Sophos, or McAfee, but that price gets you three, 10, and unlimited licenses respectively. Bitdefender Antivirus for Mac, Trend Micro, and Webroot are examples. Quite a few Mac antivirus products, like their Windows cousins, cost just under $40 per year. Do note that once that merger is complete, Norton will own Avast, Avira, AVG, and BullGuard. There’s no visible connection between the release of this new product line and the pending merger of Avast with NortonLifeLock.