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Dave-H

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Posts posted by Dave-H

  1. Well I installed those eight .NET updates on my netbook, and against all my expectations, they all installed fine and I'm now being told that the system is up to date!
    :thumbup
    So, it obviously is possible to avoid this endlessly repeating update problem, as this and @Mathwiz's experience proves.

    So, can I now fix my main machine without uninstalling and reinstalling all the .NET options?
    The first thing I will do is see exactly what versions and what updates to them are installed on the netbook, then I can compare the main machine.
    Watch this space!
    :yes:
     

  2. Just wanted to report what's happened with my XP netbook concerning the .NET updates.
    It receives the monthly patch Tuesday updates the same as my main machine, the only difference is that I have never installed on that machine any of the standalone .NET updates that have been posted here, which I have done on my main machine which now has the looping KB2756918.
    The recent updates all installed fine on the netbook (eventually, it took several hours to scan for them!) including KB3189598.
    I then did another scan, which was quick this time, and I'm now being prompted to install eight .NET Framework updates!
    They are -

    KB2861188 (.NET 4)
    KB2861189 (.NET 3.0 SP2)
    KB2840628 (.NET 4)
    KB2789642 (.NET 4)
    KB2742595 (.NET 4)
    KB2756918 (.NET 3.0 SP2)
    KB2737019 (.NET 4)
    KB2729449 (.NET 4)

    So, shall I install them all and see what happens?!
    I'm very afraid that KB2756918 will then loop permanently again as it is doing on the main machine.
    :unsure:
     

  3. Well I'm still stuck with KB2756918 wanting to install over and over again!
    :angry:
    I'm wondering what would happen if I switched automatic updating on, would it just keep installing over and over and over again in the background ad infinitum?!
    I could just hide it of course, I'm pretty sure it isn't actually necessary and the .NET 3.0 files I have installed are newer that those in it, but that's just a workaround, not a real fix.
    :)
     

  4. Thanks @heinoganda, I managed to fix the updating error by running the .NET repair tool (the first time I've ever known it to actually work!)
    I've now successfully installed KB3189598, but as I feared I'm now being prompted to install KB2756918 again, which I suspect will now keep prompting me to install it no matter how many times I apparently successfully do!
    :lol:
     

  5. All OK here except KB3189598 which failed with error 0x645.
    As @heinoganda said this is actually a duplicate of KB3188734 and KB3189017, I uninstalled KB3189017 (I never installed KB3188734 as it caused another problem with it producing a nag to install another update (KB2756918) which never stopped being prompted for).
    After doing that apparently successfully, I tried to install KB3189598 again, and it failed again, with the same error.
    Anyone any ideas?
    :unsure:
     

  6. 56 minutes ago, ThomasW said:

    If any of the configuration settings in about:config do not exist, you must create them!

    After adding all those necessary, restarting a couple of times, toggling the plugins on and off, and dancing under the full moon, all videos should play without a hitch!

    Thomas

    Thank you!
    That fixed it.
    :thumbup
    I hadn't realised that the option wouldn't be there by default.
    All working great now.
    Cheers, Dave.
    :)
     

  7. Hi, I'm just trying to get this to work on Firefox 50 on XP, but I'm not having any luck.

    Sorry if I've missed something really obvious, but my main head scratching is over the "media.gmp-eme-adobe.forceSupported" option in the Firefox configuration settings.

    It doesn't seem to exist in my Firefox installation!

    :unsure:

  8. Glad you found it!
    It was an update for security protocols, and the main thing it cured for me was that Opera 12.17 kept on suddenly shutting down all the time for no apparent reason, which was very annoying as you can imagine, and that was something to do with security issues, which were fixed in 12.18.
    I'm not holding my breath for any other updates to Opera 12 though sadly!
    :no:
     

  9. Thanks Noel, yes I looked into WinAero, and discovered the same, it used to be possible to change to a custom image using it, but since the Anniversary Update, no longer, all you can have now is the cave image or a plain colour field (which is actually the selected "accent colour" IIRC), not a different image.
    I'd still like to know where that cave image comes from, as if its source can be identified, the potential must be there to change it, even if it's hard coded into a dll or some such.
    As I said, there seem to be quite a few conspiracy theories about why Microsoft has removed this facility in Windows 10 Pro!
    :)

     

  10. I've recently "upgraded" to Windows 10, and the first thing I wanted to do was to get rid of that picture of some rocks in the sea through a cave mouth on start up and replace it with a custom image.
    Unfortunately all my researches seem to indicate that since the Anniversary Update, this is now impossible, at least if you have auto-login enabled, which I have.
    I can change the user lock screen, and make the user logon screen the same just by using the UI settings, but it seems to be impossible to change the default logon screen (the one you see when you first start the system) unless you have to put in a user password.
    If the password is bypassed, the default login screen (the rocks through the cave mouth) seems to be fixed and cannot be altered!
    Has anyone found a way around this?
    I gather that the gpedit functions which used to control this, so that people could use their own branding on the lock screen for instance, have now been depreciated in the Anniversary Update unless you have the Enterprise version of Windows 10. They've now been removed form the Pro version, which is really annoying!
    There are dark mutterings that this was removed because it would have enabled people to prevent Microsoft from forcing advertising onto people's logon screens.
    Does anyone have an answer to this?
    Presumably that cave picture must come from somewhere (it's not the one in C:\Windows\Web\Screen, I've already tried that!) so presumably it can be changed, even if it's awkward and difficult to do. I can't imagine that I would want to change it all that often!
    Any advice appreciated.
    BTW, I know I can change the image for a plain colour field using a registry hack, but I'd really like to actually have a different image!
    :)

     

  11. Just thought I'd come back here one last time to say that I'm afraid I finally decided to do the "upgrade" to Windows 10! :ph34r:
    I thought I'd probably bite the bullet and do it sometime anyway, as several of the apps that I was using on Windows 8.1 (including some paid for ones) seem to have now been abandoned in favour of Windows 10 UWP apps, which don't work on 8.1 of course. They are not updating the 8.1 versions any more as far as I can see.
    I guess they couldn't wait to abandon 8.1, which is a shame, as it will probably be now added to the list of short-lived "Cinderella" Windows versions along with ME, Vista, and to some extent even Windows 2000 (which along with ME was only around for about a year IIRC before they were both replaced by XP).
    I looked into it, and to upgrade to Windows 10 Pro from 8.1 Pro was going to cost me over £100 if I had to pay for it, so I thought I'd grab it while it was still free if you know where to go.
    See you on the Windows 10 forum I'm sure (probably many times!)
    :lol: 
     

  12. Interesting idea, although I'm not too happy that I might be being used as a guinea pig by Microsoft!
    I have my Windows Update set to warn me when updates are available, but not to automatically download or install them (a luxury you don't have with Windows 10 of course!) I was told they were available as optional updates.  
    I installed them anyway and no (obvious) harm seems to have been done, but I don't see what the point of them is, unless they are some sort of test, as you say.
    :)
     

  13. There was "October 2016 Preview of Monthly Quality Rollup for Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2" KB3192404 on October 20th, and "November 2016 Preview of Monthly Quality Rollup for Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2" KB3197875 on November 16th, both offered in between patch Tuesdays.
    They were both very large updates, pretty much the same size as the "non-preview" updates that were offered on the October and November patch Tuesdays.
    There's nothing I can see on their Microsoft information pages that says what they are supposed to be for!
    :unsure:

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