no
A stimulus causes your body to react, a response is something that is caused by a stimulus. Work it out, does the virus respond to you more or you to the virus?
Correct. A virus is considered non-living because it cannot grow or respond to stimuli on its own. It requires a host cell to replicate and carry out its functions.
No but if the virus is affecting iTunes in any way then it might not respond to your iPod as well as it should.
No. The vaccine is only a part of the virus that your body will respond to.
A vaccine is essentially a weakened or dead version of the virus. This essentially "infects" you with the virus and causes the body's immune system to respond and create anti-bodies that will kill the real virus if it does ever get into your system.
Viral Envelope
Vaccines contain a 'dead' or weakened form of a virus. The immune system will still respond as if the virus were a threat (when it is completely harmless) and will destroy it, generating lymphocytes that will 'recognise' the virus if it ever enters the body again, allowing rapid destruction if the virus ever enters the body again.
The effects are to make you immune to the virus by stimulating your immune system to respond to the tiny amount of virus in the vaccine and build up a defense for if you are ever exposed to the virus in the "wild". The way the effects are created by vaccines is described in the related question below.
You go to: filepcgames.com If this causes any viruses its not my fault idk if it does. If it doesnt give a virus, respond back.
Basic definition of a virus means a code/software that damages data and corrupts data . Also what you maybe talking about in a buffering attack
It's the injection (or the ingestion [swallowing]) of a related virus, a damaged virus, or a dead virus. Your body will respond (makes antibodies and white cells to attack them) and hopefully you will be "immune" to the "true" virus if it should attack you at some later date.
your computer have virus