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marmite

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Posts posted by marmite

  1. Have a look at this review about Hitman Pro 3.5 from Raymond.cc: http://www.raymond.cc/blog/archives/2009/1...alware-scanner/. I don't think I would really want to use this program. It's a great concept though!

    Hmmm thanks. It's a few builds on from that review, but it doesn't exactly fill you with confidence does it. Yet the article that I linked from seems to suggest it wasn't shy in sussing out malware. As you say it's a good concept ... think I'll keep an eye out for further reviews.

  2. Some of you may like to try the scanning software discussed here ... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/02/08/se...r_shortcomings/.

     

    As a 'second opinion' from several AV providers it does what it says on the tin. It's very light weight, cloud based and the scan is extremely quick.

     

    Scanning is always free, and there's a 30 day free removal period, but thereafter if you at least get a positive identified you can always find something else to remove it.

     

    The two machines I scanned came up clean so I don't think it's something that's going to throw loads of false positives at you.

  3. I didn't know the Task Manager had that ability, but I wonder why it does.

    I think the idea is just to save real-estate - you can fit the same display details into (an admittedly only slightly!) smaller window area.

     

    I'm with Corona; mine's 'replaced' by Process Explorer :) Although I do have a shortcut to a copy of taskmgr.exe in case I want to see the original view.

  4. Ok, so now I've merged the registry backup file. Windows said the merge was successful. Only I'm still getting both of those error messages. What now?

    If you haven't rebooted after the merge try doing that.

  5. if you mean all boxes as in ccleaner section then i'm going to agree with marmite and can think of no way for ccleaner to be at fault in this

     

    if you mean all boxes as in registry integrity then ...

    Fair point. I read "all the boxes in the cleaner" to mean the normal cleaner part ... not "all the boxes in the reg integrity checker". Maybe the OP even meant both! :blink:

  6. ... you can't restore without the Rescue CD or USB.

    If you use the paid-for version of Reflect it gives you a Reflect recovery boot option using WinPE ... http://www.macrium.com/webhelp/Windows_Boot_Menu.asp ... http://support.macrium.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=2155

     

    My desktop PC is configured in this way - something I'd completely forgotten about since I've not had access to that desktop for a while! :blink:

  7. It is a problem for all users of Acronis and it must not remove the problem of credibility Defraggler.

    It must automatically file asrm.bin not be defragmented.

    It is not Defraggler's job to be aware of every file created by other software that is sensitive to defragmenation.

     

    It is an issue with Acronis, not Defraggler. You have the option to exclude the file from Defraggler run for just this sort of scenario.

  8. Well in the case of hiding entries you don't want to keep showing after you made a scan, I suggest you add them to the ignore list. Options>Exclude>Add File/Add Folder/Add Registry.

    I think the OP is talking about ability to (un)hide entries in the Tools / Uninstall panel.

  9. Hey everyone,

     

    New guy here...so "hi." Anyway, I use CCleaner all the time w/o a hitch. However, my son used it on his Dell laptop and had ALL of the boxes checked when he ran the cleaner and now he can't get Windows (XP) to boot. He only gets the blue screen of death: "Unmountable_Boot_Disk."

    Hi David, welcome to the forums.

     

    Firstly, there's nothing here that tells me CCleaner caused your problem. I say this just as an experienced user, not as a CCleaner fan. Your son used CCleaner. The subsequent reboot failed. But there's no evidence in your post to suggest one caused the other. There's isn't really anything that CCleaner does that might cause such a failure. What exactly makes you think CCleaner might be responsible?

     

    As to your boot problem, here's one post where someone has resolved this issue ... http://www.windowsbbs.com/windows-xp/33801..._boot_disk.html

     

    How old is the laptop ... could it just be a hard disk failure?

  10. I'm wondering if the Master Boot Record has been corrupted on that hard drive.

     

    You could try downloading a small utility called "Roadkil's Boot Build". It's a simple exe file which will read the MBR of a hard drive.

     

    It can also write a new MBR if this is indeed the problem.

     

    Roadkil's Boot Build: (Freeware)

    Nice link Dennis.

     

    I had a problem once when repartitioning, and I managed to leave the boot record in an inconsistent state. Lost all visibility of the partition but I knew the data was intact.

     

    I ended up repairing it with TestDisk, but this utility looks simpler to use.

     

    Having sorted out the boot record everything was fine and it looked like new.

  11. Firstly Tigerllc74 (in case you carry on reading ;)) I echo Tasgandy's comment in the previous post to this one.

     

    I'm still posting because login123 would like to try this, so really in that sense the thread has moved on also. So my subsequent comments are for login123's benefit ...

     

    All due respect to all the replies thus far, we need to step back and consider something very obvious.

     

    How things "supposed" to work and how it "actually" work is night and day sometimes. What I shared was how it "actually" worked.

    And with sincere respect to the OP's experience, that doesn't mean "it doesn't work". It doesn't mean "it won't work". It just means "it failed for the OP". We still do not know why this failed, which is why it would be a bonus were anyone to demonstrate this isn't always the case - i.e. that potentially it was a one off (because we don't know why it failed).

     

    I made myself very clear that restore worked before secure delete and after factory settings were recovered.

    I actually can't find a reference in the thread to a back-up and restore immediately before the nuke. This is important because it pertains to the state and integrity of the hard drive / partitions / MBR immediately before the nuke.

     

    So login123 ... I'd be really interested to see the outcome if you were to follow this through! :)

  12. Further, I always take the offered option to replace the MBR..............what say you all.

    When I was doing my flash USB test the other day, I didn't overwrite the MBR because I did the restore immediately after the back-up, so I was confident that the existing MBR was fine.

     

    But ordinarily I'd probably agree; though it is something I would consider, rather than just doing it habitually.

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