It a integral part of a fire wall, It scans incoming traffic with the intend of detecting and removing the virus before they enter the network this is usually does where two or more networks are interconnected.
A multipartite virus is a combination of a boot sector virus and a file virus. It can hide in either type of program.
Yes and no. No because an anti virus and yes because a lot of virus definitions are reported in virus killers before the virus is made. So in short no it's a Antivirus that probably make their own virus's.
A tracking cookie is not a virus. Sometimes the cookies can be from harmful sites, but the cookie itself does have a virus.
Virus program writers can have fake code within the programto prevent virus checkers from spotting the patterns of instructions which are commonly used in virus programs
A virA virus is a program that can "infect" other programs by modifying them. Modification includes a copy of the virus program, which may infect other programs. Computer virus has similarity with biological virus, a biological virus infects the machinery responsible for the living cell to work and a computer virus carries in its instructional code the recipe for making perfect copies of it. us is a program that can "infect" other programs by modifying them. Modification includes a copy of the virus program, which may infect other programs. Computer virus has similarity with biological virus, a biological virus infects the machinery responsible for the living cell to work and a computer virus carries in its instructional code the recipe for making perfect copies of it.
noo
it protects the cell wall from any bacteria virus, and other enffections
A virus is a particle with DNA but no nucleus or cell wall.
it protects the cell wall from any bacteria virus, and other enffections
capsid wall
a cell wall
The yellow fever virus is released through a cell wall. Generally viruses do not have a cell wall. However, they attach to cell walls.
The cellulose makes the cell wall harder to protect it from bacterias and other harmful virus.
Injection. After the virus has attached to the cell wall, it then injects its genetic material into the cell.
When a virus breaks through a cell wall/ membrane and infects the cytoplasm.
a virus uses leg-like appendages to clamp onto a cell and a spike or chemical coating to penetrate the cell wall http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-difference-between-a-virus-and-a-bacteria.htm
Answer... NO According to the KAPLAN's explanation of AAMC MCAT practice test CBT 4, viruses can have cell walls (question B). Either they are wrong, or the rigid coating of a virus is called a cell wall though the virus itself is not considered a "cell." I will look for another source on this, but the common sense answer may not be correct here... I suppose this is just a grievous error on the AAMC MCAT. Viruses do have a protein coat similar to a cell wall, but obviously it is not called a cell wall.