Discussion:
ActiveX will not re-install...
(too old to reply)
Neil Gould
2009-04-03 11:14:59 UTC
Permalink
Hi all,

I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations, so out
of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.

Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.

TIA,

Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-03 14:59:19 UTC
Permalink
And you anti-virus application is...?
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations, so out
of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-03 20:58:27 UTC
Permalink
Hi,
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
And you anti-virus application is...?
Of course, I did thoroughly check my system for viruses after the "update"
first failed about a week ago. The system is clean.

Also, I have several versions of Flash & ActiveX off-line installers, and
they now all fail with the same error (an OSX file fails to register, the
actual file depends on the version), even when anti-virus is disabled. I was
able to install them as needed before without problems.

Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-03 22:36:37 UTC
Permalink
You didn't answer my question.
Post by Neil Gould
Hi,
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
And you anti-virus application is...?
Of course, I did thoroughly check my system for viruses after the "update"
first failed about a week ago. The system is clean.
Also, I have several versions of Flash & ActiveX off-line installers, and
they now all fail with the same error (an OSX file fails to register, the
actual file depends on the version), even when anti-virus is disabled. I was
able to install them as needed before without problems.
Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-04 10:56:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
You didn't answer my question.
Typically, I use Spybot when on-line. However, to check the system after the
first failure, I used a number of anti-virus applications that I keep
on-hand and up-to-date. None reported any problems, and all subsequent
attempts to install ActiveX were done off-line with no active anti-virus
software.

Hope that helps.

Neil
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Hi,
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
And you anti-virus application is...?
Of course, I did thoroughly check my system for viruses after the
"update" first failed about a week ago. The system is clean.
Also, I have several versions of Flash & ActiveX off-line
installers, and they now all fail with the same error (an OSX file
fails to register, the actual file depends on the version), even
when anti-virus is disabled. I was
able to install them as needed before without problems.
Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-04 14:30:15 UTC
Permalink
Spybot is not an anti-virus application. Do you NOT have an (one)
anti-virus application running in the background at all times?

Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of them may
be blocking the ActiveX file from installing. Since you're so familiar with
this stuff, I don't need to tell you anything more, I'm sure.

Protect Your PC!
http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/computer/default.mspx

Steps To Help Prevent Spyware
http://www.microsoft.com/protect/computer/spyware/prevent.mspx

Steps to Help Prevent Computer Worms
http://www.microsoft.com/protect/computer/viruses/worms/prevent.mspx
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
You didn't answer my question.
Typically, I use Spybot when on-line. However, to check the system after the
first failure, I used a number of anti-virus applications that I keep
on-hand and up-to-date. None reported any problems, and all subsequent
attempts to install ActiveX were done off-line with no active anti-virus
software.
Hope that helps.
Neil
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Hi,
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
And you anti-virus application is...?
Of course, I did thoroughly check my system for viruses after the
"update" first failed about a week ago. The system is clean.
Also, I have several versions of Flash & ActiveX off-line
installers, and they now all fail with the same error (an OSX file
fails to register, the actual file depends on the version), even
when anti-virus is disabled. I was
able to install them as needed before without problems.
Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-04 16:49:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of
them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during offline
installlation attempts?

Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-04 17:05:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of
them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during offline
installlation attempts?
Thread history:
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615

NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall ignore all
further replies.

Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer. In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls if the
machine was offline.

Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/

PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook Express?
==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Neil Gould
2009-04-04 18:09:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of
them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during offline
installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall ignore all
further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes running
according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls if the
machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools for doing
exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I could install other
versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook Express?
==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.

Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-04 21:53:54 UTC
Permalink
Closing/exiting Spybot does NOT disable SDHelper or Tea Timer.

If you don't fully understand what such "system protections" do and how they
do it, best not to enable them in the first place.

And I'd still like to know how this pertains to OE?
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of
them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during offline
installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall ignore
all further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes running
according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls if the
machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools for doing
exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I could install other
versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook Express?
==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.
Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-05 11:35:29 UTC
Permalink
So... you are saying that Spybot's resident monitors (SDHelper and TeaTimer)
are running in spite of the fact that their processes do not appear in Task
Manager? I think that is rather unlikely, since they do show up when
they're running.

I realize it was a long-shot to find someone here or in the other
cross-posted groups that might have come up with a Win2k solution along the
lines of a specific registry entry to change. It was a widely-cast net, and
the thought was that users of OE6 would also be likely to use IE6. That link
is now removed since there was no response.

Thanks, again.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Closing/exiting Spybot does NOT disable SDHelper or Tea Timer.
If you don't fully understand what such "system protections" do and
how they do it, best not to enable them in the first place.
And I'd still like to know how this pertains to OE?
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of
them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during
offline installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall
ignore all further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes
running according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls
if the machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools for
doing exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I could
install other versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook Express?
==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.
Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-05 19:28:24 UTC
Permalink
Post here instead, please: http://forums.spybot.info/
Post by Neil Gould
So... you are saying that Spybot's resident monitors (SDHelper and TeaTimer)
are running in spite of the fact that their processes do not appear in Task
Manager? I think that is rather unlikely, since they do show up when
they're running.
I realize it was a long-shot to find someone here or in the other
cross-posted groups that might have come up with a Win2k solution along the
lines of a specific registry entry to change. It was a widely-cast net, and
the thought was that users of OE6 would also be likely to use IE6. That link
is now removed since there was no response.
Thanks, again.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Closing/exiting Spybot does NOT disable SDHelper or Tea Timer.
If you don't fully understand what such "system protections" do and
how they do it, best not to enable them in the first place.
And I'd still like to know how this pertains to OE?
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of
them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during
offline installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall
ignore all further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes
running according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls
if the machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools for
doing exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I could
install other versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook Express?
==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.
Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-06 12:16:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post here instead, please: http://forums.spybot.info/
Thanks for your attempts to help, PA Bear, but I don't think the issue has
anything at all to do with Spybot. As I wrote several times, now, the issue
persists even when Spybot is not running, and if its processes are not
running, it isn't running.

I suspect that this is something specific to registry entries in Win2k/IE6,
as solutions to this problem seem to work for most folks running XP.

Neil
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
So... you are saying that Spybot's resident monitors (SDHelper and TeaTimer)
are running in spite of the fact that their processes do not appear in Task
Manager? I think that is rather unlikely, since they do show up when
they're running.
I realize it was a long-shot to find someone here or in the other
cross-posted groups that might have come up with a Win2k solution along the
lines of a specific registry entry to change. It was a widely-cast net, and
the thought was that users of OE6 would also be likely to use IE6. That link
is now removed since there was no response.
Thanks, again.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Closing/exiting Spybot does NOT disable SDHelper or Tea Timer.
If you don't fully understand what such "system protections" do and
how they do it, best not to enable them in the first place.
And I'd still like to know how this pertains to OE?
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one
of them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during
offline installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall
ignore all further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes
running according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls
if the machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools for
doing exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I could
install other versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook
Express? ==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.
Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-04-06 16:16:13 UTC
Permalink
And I will repeat that disabling Spybot does NOT disable its Residents or
its Immunizations.
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post here instead, please: http://forums.spybot.info/
Thanks for your attempts to help, PA Bear, but I don't think the issue has
anything at all to do with Spybot. As I wrote several times, now, the issue
persists even when Spybot is not running, and if its processes are not
running, it isn't running.
I suspect that this is something specific to registry entries in Win2k/IE6,
as solutions to this problem seem to work for most folks running XP.
Neil
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
So... you are saying that Spybot's resident monitors (SDHelper and TeaTimer)
are running in spite of the fact that their processes do not appear in Task
Manager? I think that is rather unlikely, since they do show up when
they're running.
I realize it was a long-shot to find someone here or in the other
cross-posted groups that might have come up with a Win2k solution along the
lines of a specific registry entry to change. It was a widely-cast net, and
the thought was that users of OE6 would also be likely to use IE6. That link
is now removed since there was no response.
Thanks, again.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Closing/exiting Spybot does NOT disable SDHelper or Tea Timer.
If you don't fully understand what such "system protections" do and
how they do it, best not to enable them in the first place.
And I'd still like to know how this pertains to OE?
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one
of them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during
offline installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I shall
ignore all further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes
running according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX Controls
if the machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools for
doing exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I could
install other versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook
Express? ==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.
Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-06 16:48:57 UTC
Permalink
OK... good enough. However, uninstalling it does.

I do understand your perspective that an AntiVirus app could block registry
changes, but prior to going through all of this and asking for help here, I
uninstalled ALL of my anti-virus apps prior to the off-line installation
attempts, and that didn't change the outcome. Also, the on-line
Flash10/ActiveX installation worked flawlessly for FireFox with Spybot
active (same machine).

Thanks... any other ideas?
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
And I will repeat that disabling Spybot does NOT disable its
Residents or its Immunizations.
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post here instead, please: http://forums.spybot.info/
Thanks for your attempts to help, PA Bear, but I don't think the
issue has anything at all to do with Spybot. As I wrote several
times, now, the issue
persists even when Spybot is not running, and if its processes are
not running, it isn't running.
I suspect that this is something specific to registry entries in Win2k/IE6,
as solutions to this problem seem to work for most folks running XP.
Neil
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
So... you are saying that Spybot's resident monitors (SDHelper and TeaTimer)
are running in spite of the fact that their processes do not appear in Task
Manager? I think that is rather unlikely, since they do show up
when they're running.
I realize it was a long-shot to find someone here or in the other
cross-posted groups that might have come up with a Win2k solution along the
lines of a specific registry entry to change. It was a widely-cast net, and
the thought was that users of OE6 would also be likely to use IE6. That link
is now removed since there was no response.
Thanks, again.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Closing/exiting Spybot does NOT disable SDHelper or Tea Timer.
If you don't fully understand what such "system protections" do
and how they do it, best not to enable them in the first place.
And I'd still like to know how this pertains to OE?
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but
one of them may be blocking the ActiveX file from installing.
How would that happen when they are not running, e.g. during
offline installlation attempts?
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6.browser/browse_frm/thread/27e94bcb95f02615
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
NB: Quote this post in full if you reply to it, otherwise I
shall ignore all further replies.
Being offline has no affect whatsoever on Spybot SDHelper and Tea Timer.
When I wrote "...they are not running...", I meant that I exited Spybot and
there were no Spybot or any other anti-virus programs' processes
running according to Task Manager.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
In
any event, you would not be able to install most ActiveX
Controls if the machine was offline.
I was certainly able to do that before, as I have Adobe's tools
for doing exactly that, and until I ran into this problem, I
could install other versions of ActiveX for testing purposes.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot Support Forums
http://forums.spybot.info/
PS: What on earth does any of this have to do with Outlook
Express? ==
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-IE, Mail, Security, Windows Client - since 2002
Thanks for your attempts to help out.
Neil
Robert Aldwinckle
2009-04-06 20:32:14 UTC
Permalink
Also, the on-line Flash10/ActiveX installation worked flawlessly
for FireFox with Spybot active (same machine).
FireFox is using ActiveX now?

http://support.mozilla.com/en-US/kb/ActiveX


News to me. Thanks.


http://www.iol.ie/~locka/mozilla/plugin.htm


(Live Search for
firefox activex
)


So, now you can see how your symptom will change in No Add-ons mode. <eg>


---
Neil Gould
2009-04-04 18:16:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Spybot is not an anti-virus application. Do you NOT have an (one)
anti-virus application running in the background at all times?
Spybot's two Residents provide only minimal protection, but one of them may
be blocking the ActiveX file from installing. Since you're so familiar with
this stuff, I don't need to tell you anything more, I'm sure.
Protect Your PC!
http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/computer/default.mspx
Steps To Help Prevent Spyware
http://www.microsoft.com/protect/computer/spyware/prevent.mspx
Steps to Help Prevent Computer Worms
http://www.microsoft.com/protect/computer/viruses/worms/prevent.mspx
The "Full Service Scan", above, reported that there were no viruses etc. on
this system. While that may not be ultimately conclusive, it is consistent
with all the other anti-virus I've run, so I'm fairly confident that the
problem lies elsewhere.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
You didn't answer my question.
Typically, I use Spybot when on-line. However, to check the system after the
first failure, I used a number of anti-virus applications that I keep
on-hand and up-to-date. None reported any problems, and all subsequent
attempts to install ActiveX were done off-line with no active anti-virus
software.
Hope that helps.
Neil
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Post by Neil Gould
Hi,
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
And you anti-virus application is...?
Of course, I did thoroughly check my system for viruses after the
"update" first failed about a week ago. The system is clean.
Also, I have several versions of Flash & ActiveX off-line
installers, and they now all fail with the same error (an OSX file
fails to register, the actual file depends on the version), even
when anti-virus is disabled. I was
able to install them as needed before without problems.
Neil
Stubby
2009-04-05 15:30:01 UTC
Permalink
Sometime ago I had an awful time trying to install the latest Flash.
I finally found someone at Adobe that told me the problem is that the
permissions were wrong on something and that prevented removing the
previous version and the installation would fail. It turns out to be
a known problem and they have a prescription to fixing it that
involves installing subinacl and feeding it two command files. I'll
bet you can find it by searching the Flash installation page and the
faq.
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations, so out
of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Steve Parry
2009-04-05 21:46:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations, so out
of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Try downloading and using the full installer here, worked for me

http://www.softwarepatch.com/network-security/flashplay-security.html
--
Steve Parry

www.gwynfryn.co.uk
Neil Gould
2009-04-06 12:22:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steve Parry
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to
whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Try downloading and using the full installer here, worked for me
http://www.softwarepatch.com/network-security/flashplay-security.html
Thanks, Steve. I already have this installer, as well as for older versions,
and none of them will load on my system, though they did so prior to my
attempt to update fp10 on-line.

Neil
Steve Parry
2009-04-06 17:22:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Neil Gould
Post by Steve Parry
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to
whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Try downloading and using the full installer here, worked for me
http://www.softwarepatch.com/network-security/flashplay-security.html
Thanks, Steve. I already have this installer, as well as for older versions,
and none of them will load on my system, though they did so prior to my
attempt to update fp10 on-line.
Neil
I noted that this download and its predecessor where named the same, the
predecessor would'nt install on my system but the newer one would :)
--
Steve Parry

www.gwynfryn.co.uk
Neil Gould
2009-04-06 19:06:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steve Parry
Post by Neil Gould
Post by Steve Parry
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my
working ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even
after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as
to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Try downloading and using the full installer here, worked for me
http://www.softwarepatch.com/network-security/flashplay-security.html
Thanks, Steve. I already have this installer, as well as for older versions,
and none of them will load on my system, though they did so prior to
my attempt to update fp10 on-line.
Neil
I noted that this download and its predecessor where named the same,
the predecessor would'nt install on my system but the newer one would
:)
Now, that _is_ curious!

What OS are you running?

Neil
Neil Gould
2009-04-07 15:20:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after
meticulously following all their instructions and various other
recommendations, so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS
news groups as to whether anyone else has insights or suggestions to
try. The failure is apparently due to an OSX file that fails to
register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
Although I don't have a definitive reason why it worked, I was able to
re-install Flash10/ActiveX successfully today via the on-line process at
Adobe.com.

Thanks for the ideas and help,

Neil
Roger Fink
2009-07-20 03:37:02 UTC
Permalink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to
whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Bruce Hagen
2009-07-20 03:50:51 UTC
Permalink
Nobody here can delete a message from the news server. Put the spammer 9996:

ghjfdjkjdbf v

in your killfile. He/she is responsible. I never saw a thing until your
post.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP [Mail]
Imperial Beach, CA
Post by Roger Fink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to
whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Roger Fink
2009-07-20 04:29:22 UTC
Permalink
Thanks - with the spam message open, I did a “Blocked Sender” trick from the
OE Tools menu. Never did this before but I trust that is what you were
referring to.


BTW, my understanding is that I can delete a thread in OE by hitting the
Delete key, and I’ve done that in the past. In this instance however I’ve
been using the Delete icon, obviously without success. Wrong place for this
question, I realize, but shouldn’t they yield the same result?
Post by Bruce Hagen
Nobody here can delete a message from the news server. Put the
ghjfdjkjdbf v
in your killfile. He/she is responsible. I never saw a thing until
your post.
Post by Roger Fink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my
working ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even
after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as
to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Bruce Hagen
2009-07-20 04:35:07 UTC
Permalink
I use message rules, but Blocked Senders has the same result. You want to
block the latest poster. You say the thread keeps coming back, but it's only
because of a new post. Either method of deleting should have the same
results.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP [Mail]
Imperial Beach, CA
Thanks - with the spam message open, I did a "Blocked Sender" trick from
the
OE Tools menu. Never did this before but I trust that is what you were
referring to.
BTW, my understanding is that I can delete a thread in OE by hitting the
Delete key, and I've done that in the past. In this instance however I've
been using the Delete icon, obviously without success. Wrong place for this
question, I realize, but shouldn't they yield the same result?
Post by Bruce Hagen
ghjfdjkjdbf v
in your killfile. He/she is responsible. I never saw a thing until
your post.
Post by Roger Fink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my
working ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even
after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as
to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Roger Fink
2009-07-20 04:49:30 UTC
Permalink
Yes, the “thread” (I should have said “post”, which in case was one and the
same) keeps coming back, but hopefully this has put an end to it.
Post by Bruce Hagen
I use message rules, but Blocked Senders has the same result. You
want to block the latest poster. You say the thread keeps coming
back, but it's only because of a new post. Either method of deleting
should have the same results.
Thanks - with the spam message open, I did a "Blocked Sender" trick
from the
OE Tools menu. Never did this before but I trust that is what you
were referring to.
BTW, my understanding is that I can delete a thread in OE by hitting
the Delete key, and I've done that in the past. In this instance
however I've been using the Delete icon, obviously without success.
Wrong place for this
question, I realize, but shouldn't they yield the same result?
Post by Bruce Hagen
ghjfdjkjdbf v
in your killfile. He/she is responsible. I never saw a thing until
your post.
Post by Roger Fink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my
working ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even
after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other
recommendations, so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the
MS news groups as to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is
apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
PA Bear [MS MVP]
2009-07-20 05:42:44 UTC
Permalink
Here's an old trick: Create a News (not Mail!) Message Rule that reads,
"Where the message was sent more than 10 days ago, Delete it." With this
Rule enabled, any new/incoming posts dated 10 days or more in the /future/
will be deleted automatically, too.

Of course before enabling the Rule, you'll want to make sure you've
downloaded all available messages and/or have used Catch Up.
Post by Roger Fink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my working
ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as to
whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
Roger Fink
2009-07-20 15:43:24 UTC
Permalink
Wow, that one is a candidate for the OE (news) sticky Hall-of-Fame.
Post by PA Bear [MS MVP]
Here's an old trick: Create a News (not Mail!) Message Rule that
reads, "Where the message was sent more than 10 days ago, Delete it."
With this Rule enabled, any new/incoming posts dated 10 days or more
in the /future/ will be deleted automatically, too.
Of course before enabling the Rule, you'll want to make sure you've
downloaded all available messages and/or have used Catch Up.
Post by Roger Fink
Because of its date, I keep deleting this thread, but it keeps on
reappearing every couple of days. Is this on some kind of automated repost?
Can somebody (kindly) delete it permanently?
NO
Post by Neil Gould
Hi all,
I've had the misfortune of having Adobe's "update" destroy my
working ActiveX installation on IE6, and can not get it back even
after meticulously
following all their instructions and various other recommendations,
so out of desperation, I thought I'd ask in the MS news groups as
to whether anyone
else has insights or suggestions to try. The failure is apparently due to an
OSX file that fails to register, although the correct permissions are set.
Windows 2000 pro SP4... IE6.
TIA,
Neil
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