There is no hard disk drive in a DVD player. So nothing will go wrong.
no
Yes ,If you do not have the latest patches and the most updates anti virus software
A virus can affect a computer in many ways. From simply freezing the screen - to writing vast amounts of gibberish data to the hard drive, filling it up.
AnswerNo therre is no virus box. Viruses and other malware are programmed to infected a certain file. Even if there were a virus box your computer would have to detect the virus and that doesn't happen without anti virus softwreAnswerI think there is no Anti Viruis Box or drive. Becuase for one reason the anti virus software OS installed on your coumputer. Second every virus can affect the PC. The only way for it not to affect your coumputer is to update and software update from your OS (operating System) Provider. Most OS Provider has updated on there website. Those updates are added to your memory. Also a good thing to help even better is to update the Virus def: each day because there are always new virus's being made each day. If you keep on doing that. Then Soon your coumputer will be less likely to affect your coumputer.Answer:There are "anti-virus boxes" out there, but they are actually called "web appliances" These devices are normally found in the larger networks of corporations and web hosting services. They incorporate anti-virus software with the functionality of a gateway. The cost is pretty high and doesn't really apply to the home end user. It would be best if you had an anti-virus software installed on your computer
It turns your hard drive binto a 3½" floppy! and you cant do anything, really annoying!
Yes, a virus is capable of crashing your hard drive.
depends if it infects the bios.
The virus is on the hard drive so if you get a new hard drive the virus will be gone. A cheaper option would be to just reinstall the operating system though. (Vista, Win 7)
a virus that destroys the hard drive also know as the (d:) is syphillis
A USB virus is a piece of malware that is transmitted by a flash drive...
No
the
Depends on how the virus is coded and what its created to target.