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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Reinstalling IE 7 in Vista OK, a tiny bit of venting first: "IE 7 is an integral part of the Vista OS and therefore etc. etc. etc." Even if it's integral, it's made up of files that can be re-copied from a CD, isn't it? And if it's "integral" to Vista, how come it can be retrofitted to XP, etc. etc. etc. ? Wasn't there a big court battle about "integral" apps a while back etc. etc. etc. Now, on to the question (and no, I don't feel better now). My IE7 suddenly started acting badly (120sec startup); the system is new, and I just copied over my long-standing Favorites and Links from my old XP system (using the Migration Wizard, which deserves a long rant of its own). It's hard to suspect this of wrecking IE7. I installed -- and am happily using -- Firefox with no issues, but something tells me that one day I'll need this "integral part of Vista" for some obscure purpose, so I want it working. I went through all the usual steps of clear cache, doing the ultimate reset to defaults step, etc. No joy. I then ran SFC /SCANNOW as directed in the knowledge base. It informed me that I had some corrupted files, but it couldn't fix them (Why, for heaven's sake? They're just files!). It told me the details were in a log file, which turned out to be a 32Mb text file full of incomprehensible gibberish... no where in it did it say something like "<filename> is corrupted". So am I really stuck with reinstalling the whole OS (which, by the way, came pre-installed on the computer, and hopefully has all the necessary restore files)? What will this process trash? Apps? Data files? Passwords? Preferences of some kind? I'm pissed off, I'm tired, and I'm worried that the hours of migration will have to be repeated. Can anyone offer some soothing and helpful advice? Many thanks, Brian |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Reinstalling IE 7 in Vista Hi Brian, You can't reinstall it, regardless of whether or not you want to. IE7 for XP is an entirely different install package. The number one cause of problems with IE starting up is with plug-ins/add-ons loading with it. Try disabling these from tools/manage add-ons. -- Best of Luck, Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ Windows help - www.rickrogers.org My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com "Brian B. Egan" <Brian B. Egan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:C5D76FC4-B23A-4EE7-A3F6-2E9549989CBA@microsoft.com... > OK, a tiny bit of venting first: "IE 7 is an integral part of the Vista OS > and therefore etc. etc. etc." Even if it's integral, it's made up of > files > that can be re-copied from a CD, isn't it? And if it's "integral" to > Vista, > how come it can be retrofitted to XP, etc. etc. etc. ? Wasn't there a big > court battle about "integral" apps a while back etc. etc. etc. > > Now, on to the question (and no, I don't feel better now). My IE7 > suddenly > started acting badly (120sec startup); the system is new, and I just > copied > over my long-standing Favorites and Links from my old XP system (using the > Migration Wizard, which deserves a long rant of its own). It's hard to > suspect this of wrecking IE7. > > I installed -- and am happily using -- Firefox with no issues, but > something > tells me that one day I'll need this "integral part of Vista" for some > obscure purpose, so I want it working. > > I went through all the usual steps of clear cache, doing the ultimate > reset > to defaults step, etc. No joy. I then ran SFC /SCANNOW as directed in > the > knowledge base. It informed me that I had some corrupted files, but it > couldn't fix them (Why, for heaven's sake? They're just files!). It told > me > the details were in a log file, which turned out to be a 32Mb text file > full > of incomprehensible gibberish... no where in it did it say something like > "<filename> is corrupted". > > So am I really stuck with reinstalling the whole OS (which, by the way, > came > pre-installed on the computer, and hopefully has all the necessary restore > files)? What will this process trash? Apps? Data files? Passwords? > Preferences of some kind? > > I'm pissed off, I'm tired, and I'm worried that the hours of migration > will > have to be repeated. Can anyone offer some soothing and helpful advice? > > Many thanks, > Brian |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Reinstalling IE 7 in Vista "Rick Rogers" wrote: > ... Try disabling > these from tools/manage add-ons. Good advice, and thanks. Unfortunately, I did that as one of the four steps leading to the ultimate return-to-default reset. No joy. Still not sure why MS won't make it repairable and/or reinstallable. Time pressures, other focus, no money in it? I buy those as legitimate business reasons, however unpalletable. But "can't"... nah! Thanks anyway, Brian, about to reinstall Vista ($&^^*#@^*@$#%&!!!) |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: Reinstalling IE 7 in Vista How did your install Vista? Since it is a new install, why not just reinstall it? What else did you install that may have corrupted the files? If Vista did not ask for the install disk to repair the files, maybe you have a bad sector on your HD. "Brian B. Egan" <Brian B. Egan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:C5D76FC4-B23A-4EE7-A3F6-2E9549989CBA@microsoft.com... > OK, a tiny bit of venting first: "IE 7 is an integral part of the Vista OS > and therefore etc. etc. etc." Even if it's integral, it's made up of > files > that can be re-copied from a CD, isn't it? And if it's "integral" to > Vista, > how come it can be retrofitted to XP, etc. etc. etc. ? Wasn't there a big > court battle about "integral" apps a while back etc. etc. etc. > > Now, on to the question (and no, I don't feel better now). My IE7 > suddenly > started acting badly (120sec startup); the system is new, and I just > copied > over my long-standing Favorites and Links from my old XP system (using the > Migration Wizard, which deserves a long rant of its own). It's hard to > suspect this of wrecking IE7. > > I installed -- and am happily using -- Firefox with no issues, but > something > tells me that one day I'll need this "integral part of Vista" for some > obscure purpose, so I want it working. > > I went through all the usual steps of clear cache, doing the ultimate > reset > to defaults step, etc. No joy. I then ran SFC /SCANNOW as directed in > the > knowledge base. It informed me that I had some corrupted files, but it > couldn't fix them (Why, for heaven's sake? They're just files!). It told > me > the details were in a log file, which turned out to be a 32Mb text file > full > of incomprehensible gibberish... no where in it did it say something like > "<filename> is corrupted". > > So am I really stuck with reinstalling the whole OS (which, by the way, > came > pre-installed on the computer, and hopefully has all the necessary restore > files)? What will this process trash? Apps? Data files? Passwords? > Preferences of some kind? > > I'm pissed off, I'm tired, and I'm worried that the hours of migration > will > have to be repeated. Can anyone offer some soothing and helpful advice? > > Many thanks, > Brian |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: Reinstalling IE 7 in Vista "John Barnes" wrote: > How did your install Vista? Since it is a new install, why not just > reinstall it? What else did you install that may have corrupted the files? > If Vista did not ask for the install disk to repair the files, maybe you > have a bad sector on your HD. John, Vista came pre-installed on my brand-new HP laptop. I've installed a number of presumably safe apps, but IE ran find after each install. Not sure what might have done the damage (nargles?). The repair I tried to do was through SFC /SCANNOW; there may be a better way to do this. However, I'm reconciled to having to reinstall the OS (sigh...); what I worry about is losing apps or data. In the old days, we could reinstall the OS over the old/bad one, and it wouldn't trash installed apps, etc. Not so sure about Vista. I'll back up first, of course! Best, Brian |
My System Specs![]() |
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