I was--and am--running UbuntuStudio 7 still.10. Now, though this is Ubuntu even, I can run Windows programs with Wine. My friend's brother was playing on my computer and got into my e-mail. hausfreeware on this page. He opened up the Elvis e-mail, which contains a virus. I found out later that the virus got into Wine. Not too much later after the contamination, I started running Microsoft Office, when Ubuntu came up with an error. Firefox crashed randomly.
Then Wine started running Notepad instead of the application I wanted. I used Ubuntu's virus scanner and it found one virus in the Wine folder, one virus in the Apt folder, and one in the Root folder.
It, unlike Norton, deleted all three without any problem. Now I have a special program, BlueProximity, that locks the computer whenever my Palm Treo, bluetooth phone, or bluetooth censor, enters or leaves the computer's range. I also have my computer auto-lock itself. Online Rogue One Star Wars Official Trailer Watch 2016 there. filecloudwed. I was able to recover some files on the Virutal C:\ drive, but most were lost to the virus. We're not exactly sure what Chris means by the "Elvis virus," (the first four pages of Google search results list it as the condition by which "your computer gets fat, slow and lazy, and self-destructs then, only to resurface at shopping service and malls stations across rural America,") but we're certain Chris' friend's brother shouldn't have been poking around Chris' in-box. Why was he tampering with Chris' e-mail anyway?
His first problem is a rude house guest. Incidentally, why was there a link to a live virus stewing in said e-mail message? maletracker.
Before pointing a finger at any antivirus program, Chris should consider implementing a guest account to keep bratty brothers in check, and ramping up the spam filters in his e-mail. If frequent spam makes the current account unwieldy, it's easy enough to start fresh with a new account. I dove into some Ubuntu forums to get an improved understanding of the extent to which a virus can infect a Linux box running Wine, the Windows-like environment. There were differing opinions, experiences, suppositions, and authorities, but from the multitude of propositions there was this silver thread: that some malware can indeed infect Wine, including manifesting in the crashes Chris described. The majority of infections, however, will not be able to spread into the Linux operating system. That is, unless you're running Wine as root. According to the Wine wiki, this will throw open the gateway for viruses to access your computer, and if Chris found a virus file in the root folder, there's a good chance that's what happened.
To purge the virus, try killing your Wine processes, delete the contents of the ~/.wine directory, and when you re-start, make certain it's in regular mode, and not as root (or sudo.) If nothing rights itself immediately, try rebooting; and if you have the heebie-jeebies still, you can run a firewall always. AirCast Beta lets you play your videos on your Chromecast.