How to. About This Article. Written by:. Co-authors: Updated: July 10, Categories: Internet Explorer. Article Summary X 1. Italiano: Disinstallare Completamente Internet Explorer.
Nederlands: Internet Explorer verwijderen. Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 1,, times. In most of the posts, there was only one way of doing that, which I couldn't. But this post helped me by the alternate method of using control panel. More reader stories Hide reader stories. Is this article up to date? Cookies make wikiHow better. By continuing to use our site, you agree to our cookie policy. Rohit Kumar Jul 24, Anonymous Jul 1, Internet Explorer has been such a pain to me, I can't download any games because it just pulls up more pages of Internet Explorer.
Glad to finally turn it off. Anonymous Feb 12, Anonymous Feb 11, Anonymous Jun 2, Share yours! More success stories Hide success stories. Featured Articles How to. Trending Articles How to. New Pages How to. Watch Articles How to. I definitely agree the Microsoft utility should be tried, probably first. However, the link you provide at the beginning of the article appears to be broken. It worked like a charm for me, and hopefully it might help others.
Thanks for the instructions though, in case I ever need them. I mostly use FF3 but still. It is unusable. All the problems I have seen with IE 8 have concerns about its speed or incompatibility. My problems have been that it has slowed the opening of programs. Before upgrading in General I keep a copy of the setup files in a special folder … called setup files.
It would not accept his password. Problem solved. I think it is ironic that he can no longer use a Microsoft browser to connect to a Microsoft program.
IE would then close down, automatically reopen and recover the page, only to have the same thing happen again. It appears that the website continues to have a problem. I had the same problem. I installed IE to over-ride IE7. I looked up remove a programme but it wasn,t there. I did this without any problem and reinstalled IE7.
IE8 is NOT a programme but an update. By the way I am running Windows Vist Basic version. Tony Denmark. THEN if things go south, you can simply restore from your backup — hey, presto! It seems to me, that most of the folks who are having problems with IE8 are running Vista! Sound advice and logic there! Another timely article, Leo. It took me through all the necessary steps, including the reinstallation of IE7 to my settings.
By the way, IE8 has worked perfectly on my Vista machines. So generalizations based on OS are useless. I have been using firefox for a while year or more and love it. It occasionally has a hiccup, but for the most part is trouble free, fast and reliable. Thanks for the tips to NOT update! I hate FireFox. I have been struggling with all 4 computers running IE8 for about a month until I threw in the towel a few days ago and downgraded back to IE7 I hate to downgrade.
They refunded me the money. If you encounter any problems after you install new Windows updates, you will have to uninstall the updates. In this article, we will cover how to uninstall windows updates when necessary. Feature updates are pretty big in size. They come every six months or so. They are packed with new features and big changes. You can see your recently installed updates and you can uninstall them easily.
You can do that by clicking the Start Button and click the Settings cog. This action will open a window with all recently installed Windows updates to your PC. By default, it will be sorted in a way, so you can see the most recent updates on the top.
In case some of the smaller Windows updates caused any problem, uninstalling them should be a simple process. Even if your computer is booting fine, we recommend booting into Safe Mode before proceeding with the process. Once you follow the instructions in the previous section — Scroll down and find the Microsoft Windows section. Check the date and select the most recently installed update.
At the top left of the updates table, click Uninstall. I agree it's unlikely, but it can't hurt to try. This may be one of those 'unremovable' updates, in which case you're looking at removing 11 and reinstalling it. I should have realized the Rollup had it too. Well it is fixed now anyway. Vendor rolled out new scripts today. That has been fun These two updates have been the bane of my existence. For our environment it appears that no internal locations could be recognized as internal.
Anything internal utilizing a web browser would ask for AD credentials, no longer automatically authenticating. On top of that, any program installed on an application server would result in a popup giving a security warning, which would require the user to tell it to run anyway. Our users are extremely cautious of popups like that, both a blessing and a curse, so they were just simply not launching their applications.
Needless to say, these two updates have been removed and held back. Is anyone aware of any other discussions for this issue?
Or if anyone has found a work around? I'm assuming Microsoft won't be doing anything about it until April 11 at the earliest.
Thank you! I noticed in SharePoint editing capabilities of a page are gone in IE
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