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Andavari

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Posts posted by Andavari

  1. Sounds very interesting and it will probably be rather expensive if/when commercially released to consumers. I'm wondering how much just one disc would cost. The thing that would be most interesting is being able to fit a whole music collection on one or a few discs, and imagine being able to fit a whole series spanning multiple years on one disc, that would be amazing.

    Do you know how long it would take to burn a terabyte of data?

     

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    Right! Hopefully when it's released they'll be recordable at a higher speed. With current drive speeds DVDs do take forever to burn. Just don't make the mistake I did and accidentally buy 2.4x speed DVDs.

  2. what program do you use on your xp machine?

     

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    RecordNow! Deluxe Dell Edition v6.5.0, it's old but works like a charm and has file verification however it doesn't full erase discs which is why I still use burnatonce only for the task of full erasing discs.

  3. I tried it out, it really won't fit my needs on my WinXP system since it doesn't full erase a CD-RW, and since it doesn't verify the disc once done which I think is very important for data CDs. Also the disc it created causes IsoBuster to crash when I was scanning the disc after completion -- something which has never happend before.

     

    However on my Win98 system it may be what I need (I'll have test it to be certain) since the old version of Roxio Easy CD Creator is a bit of a nuisance since it's a resource hog, and from time to time it can't remember the settings I've selected which could end up creating a backup disc without my requirements.

  4. I have Spybot S&D which seeks out CW. Do I need to download CWShredder or is Spybot good enough?

     

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    Who knows, but when it comes to CoolWebSearch you're better off having as many utilities as you can that can remove it, whatsmore Trend Micro CWShredder is specifically programmed to remove CoolWebSearch.

  5. I've installed Opera to a non-default directory (C:/Internet/Opera):

     

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    Start using C:\Program Files as rridgely has already suggested!

     

    In the meantime if you don't want to uninstall Opera and lose your settings which is always a pain input this into CCleaner's winapp2.ini file if it doesn't already exist. This is for the Opera setup for single user usage, it won't support the Opera setup for multiple user profiles, it's a sloppy way to have CCleaner clean something it already would do fine with if the program was installed in the proper location:

     

    ; Application Cleaning file; WARNING - DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE UNLESS YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING;; Copyright ?2004-2005 CCleaner.com, All Rights Reserved.; This file and it's contents may not be copied or distributed; without the express permission of the author.;; Notes; ---------------------------------------; LangSecRef; ?3021 = Applications; ?3022 = Internet; ?3023 = Multimedia; ?3024 = Utilities; ?3025 = Windows; ?3026 = Firefox/Mozilla; ?3027 = Opera[Opera 8 (Single User)]LangSecRef=3027Detect=HKCU\Software\Opera SoftwareDefault=TrueFileKey1=C:\Internet\Opera\profile|COOKIES4.DATFileKey2=C:\Internet\Opera\profile|cookies4.dat.sbsd.bakFileKey3=C:\Internet\Opera\profile|GLOBAL.DATFileKey4=C:\Internet\Opera\profile|OPERA6.ADR.SBSD.BAKFileKey5=C:\Internet\Opera\profile\CACHE4|*.*FileKey6=C:\Internet\Opera\profile\cacheOp|*.*

     

  6. Locked in-use stuff can be removed in Windows with the small and effective freeware called Unlocker. Also HijackThis has a MISC Tools section that has the option to delete a file on reboot.

  7. prehapes you had previously had an Anti-Virus software on there that was conflicting with it? (iv seen people try to run 2 AVs on the same machine before, same thing happened)

     

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    No, I only had a DOS av scanner which at the time was F-PROT Antivirus for DOS which doesn't install anything into the registry and isn't resident at all. I decided I needed real-time protection when I discovered Avast's resident shield wouldn't work. It's been like that for over two years now through various versions of Avast and in one version the resident shield could be enabled during a Windows session, but would not be active when the computer was restarted.

     

    It doesn't matter all that much to me since the Win98 is only a backup PC to transfer files from my WinXP PC, I just keep it updated in the event my WinXP PC goes kaput for any reason.

  8. I have Zone Alarm and HAD MS anti spyware, never had this problem. Is it possible you have something running or planted on your pc you don't know about? Virus, Spyware? This will sometimes cause registry issues when trying to use any cleaner. What OS you have? What other programs that you installed that may be causing a conflict? Let me know.

     

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    My comp is clean!

  9. I personally prefer Avast, however I've noticed on my Win98 system the resident shield can't be enabled therefore I installed AVG instead. For Win2k and WinXP I'd use Avast (without the skins).

     

    As for free third-party software-based firewalls, you can take your pick from many (to find them Google them):

    * ZoneAlarm (2 way protection, buggy, free, updated often).

    * Sygate Personal Firewall (2 way protection, buggy, free, not updated often, bugs reported by users go unresolved).

    * Outpost Free (2 way protection, free, an old version, to me it has an unconventional way of configuration via the terms used).

    * Kerio Personal Firewall v2.1.5 (2 way protection, free, old version, has vulnerabilities if not properly configured to block certain incoming TCP and UDP ports -- you'll have to know what to block, can lose it's configuration when least expected).

    * Jetico (2 way protection, free, needs to mature through a few versions and eventually pass GRC.com as TruStealth).

     

    If I missed any someone else will probably give the lowdown on them.

  10. [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\FileExts\.cgi]

     

    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\FileExts\.cgi\OpenWithList]

     

     

    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\FileExts\.tmp]

     

    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\FileExts\.tmp\OpenWithList]

     

    These two are extensions added into the registry when you opened a folder containing files ending with those extensions. CCleaner will offer to remove them since there's "probably" not an application installed that directly opens them. Note: The .tmp extension is a temporary file extension, otherwise known as a junk file!

     

    [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\C5TP7AF3flp9]

     

    This I have no ideal what it pertains to.

     

    If the .reg file won't import (don't know why it wouldn't) you could open it with Notepad and change heading from:

    Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

    To:

    REGEDIT4

  11. I just read somewhere that this needs to be addressed by the manuafacturer of installer that CCLeaner uses to package their product.  A false positive, will most likely be corrected during the next release.

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    The usual problem I suspect is if a program uses any type of executable compressor program such as UPX. I'm not picking on UPX, but as an example allot of av scanners have flagged completely safe UPX compressed files (.exe, .dll, .sfx) as being infected or suspicious, hence the reason newer releases of WinRAR don't compress SFX created archives since the SFX module itself is no longer compressed by UPX.

  12. I got rid of McAfee's online scanner which was OEM-installed by Dell using RegSeeker. To get rid of allot of it that even manual cleaning can't possible accomplish run several programs with registry cleaners. You already know about CCleaner and RegSeeker, however there's also EasyCleaner and a few freeware one's I've never tried listed on Softpedia.com via an advanced search for "registry cleaners" filtered as freeware.

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