Viruses are not considered living organisms and require a host cell to replicate. They are much smaller than bacteria and consist of genetic material enclosed in a protein coat. Bacteria are single-celled organisms that can replicate independently and have their own cellular machinery.
Viruses require a living organism to do anything - most especially to reproduce.
Hidden viruses include rootkits, bootkits, and stealth viruses that hide their presence on a system to evade detection. Active viruses include file infectors, macro viruses, and polymorphic viruses that infect files or use different code patterns to avoid detection.
Viruses replicate quickly and mutate frequently during their life cycle, which allows them to adapt rapidly to new environments and hosts. This high mutation rate gives viruses the ability to evolve and potentially jump to a different host species. Additionally, some viruses have broad host ranges due to their ability to bind to receptors that are conserved across different species.
No. The are different from other pox viruses in that they replicate in the cytoplasm and not the nucleus.
No, viruses come in all shapes. Google T even viruses, adenoviruses, HIV and other retroviruses and see all the different shapes viruses can come in. Round capsids to space ship lander shaped capsids.
They are Different because Viruses are nonliving.
The two different lifecycles of viruses are Lytic and Lysogenic
Different Operating Systems get infected by different viruses. You can run different operating systems on the same hardware.
Viruses are things that spread and contain germs. An Organism is a living thing.
Viruses are things that spread and contain germs. An Organism is a living thing.
There are thousands of different types of viruses that exist in the world. These viruses can infect various organisms including animals, plants, and bacteria. It is estimated that only a small fraction of all viruses have been identified and studied so far.
Bactetia is plenty Pus cells is 8-10 Rbc is 1-5 Age is 7 months
Viruses require a living organism to do anything - most especially to reproduce.
They are called Rna viruses. Rna retro-viruses are a different and somewhat more complex matter.
Not even close. They are completely different viruses with drastically different RNA sequences (that's like DNA but for viruses).
no, only against bacteria and funguses. viruses have different properties to bacteria and funguses.
There are various different types of computer viruses out there. For example, there are key loggers, which will log what the victim types.