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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Ace of the Deep
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Hi, hope somebody can help me here, can't fully get rid of 'AntiVir PersonalEdition Premium' out of the system so I can install kapersky. Managed to get rid of everything with the exception of 3 files ..
mfc71u.dll msvcr71.dll shlext.dll when I try to delete them, I get the following pop-up .. Cannot delete ..' Access is denied. Make sure the disk is not full or write-protected and that the file is not currently in use' = ![]() Can anyone supply the 'recipe' to get rid of them as I don't want them to clash with Kapersky. |
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#2 |
The Old Man
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Actually, what you've more acurately described is not an anti-virus problem, but a virus problem. That program is a virus itself, and it is notoriously difficult to eliminate.
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#3 |
Ace of the Deep
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Sigh .. have had a lot of
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#4 |
Lucky Jack
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Have they themselves have a solution?
After all it's there product! I had Norton 2005 which left stuff behind so I went to there site and found a full remover tool which got rid of the rest.
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Dr Who rest in peace 1963-2017. ![]() To borrow Davros saying...I NAME YOU CHIBNALL THE DESTROYER OF DR WHO YOU KILLED IT! ![]() |
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#5 |
Sea Lord
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What made you want to delete antvir?I have been quite happy with it.
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#6 |
Ace of the Deep
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I went to the Antivir site and it just shows the products they have for trial/sale; the contact links state non-technical stuff only.
I had Norton on a previous Computer and it was a doddle to get rid of; just went to their web-site and downloaded their removal tool. This outfit is a different story |
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#7 |
Ocean Warrior
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Do those files actually stop you from doing anything? Just install your new AV.
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#8 | |
Ace of the Deep
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#9 | |
Ace of the Deep
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#10 | ||
Rear Admiral
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Trying to think of a way for you to do this without screwing with your registry (And possibly screwing up everything), and I am thinking msconfig is the easiest way to do that. Pull up a run box from the start menu and type msconfig in it. It will bring up a window that will show you everything that is run on your system on startup (the last tab over). From there, you can selectively disable software that starts up, then reboot your system and see if the files in question are free to be deleted. As mentioned above, if a virus has taken over these files, then it may be even difficult to do this since a common tactic of viruses is to run two copies of itself. If one copy sees that the other copy has been stopped, it will start up that copy again. Same goes vice versa. If you need to run an AV scan to check for this, use a free online scanner to avoid having to load a duplicate AV product at the same time - http://housecall.trendmicro.com/ - This way you can have an alternate program check for bugs. Remember - when selectively disabling programs in msconfig, you can use google to find out what they do. Then again, the easy way to take care of the problem is to disable everything and then delete the files. One other thing that comes to mind is that the files could be locked by a 'service'. If that is the case, you can pull up the services menu by typing services.msc into a run command box. Remember that Google is again your friend in determining what services do what. A suspicious service by the way will typically not tell you anything about itself. Those are the first you should check, but remember that all services that you use do not always give you description. Let me know how the battle goes. At the very least, you will begin to get a deeper understanding of your system. -S |
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#11 |
Ace of the Deep
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Thanks for the advice Subman1 and thanks to the others. It's been a crash course on learning about dlls and the main problem seems to lie with Internet Explorer and add-on's; there was 4 files lumped in there [the main culprit being geebb.dll] and, like you state, they don't identify themselves. Another one that repeatedly rears it's ugly head is virtumonde.dll when Computer is scanned. Things are improving and will persevere and you are right about learning more on what makes a Computer tick.
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#12 |
Stowaway
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Well by my knowing, if you want to keep your computer protected from viruses..just use ZoneAlarm. It's what I use, it gives good protection for me. You got to pay for it though.
http://www.zonealarm.com/store/content/home.jsp |
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#13 | |
Rear Admiral
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-S |
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#14 |
Rear Admiral
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shlext.dll file information
The process Shell Extensions or ShlExt.dll or SonicPDFShellExt.dll belongs to the software Sonic RecordNow! or AntiVir PersonalEdition or Sonic PDF or Avira AntiVir PersonalEdition or ShlExt by Sonic Solutions (www.sonic.com) or H+BEDV Datentechnik GmbH (www.free-av.com) or Investintech.com Inc or Avira GmbH. Description: File shlext.dll is located in a subfolder of "C:\Program Files". Known file sizes on Windows XP are 69672 bytes (76% of all occurrence), 176128 bytes, 61480 bytes, 73728 bytes, 86016 bytes, 65576 bytes, 77824 bytes. A .dll file (Dynamic Link Library) is a special type of Windows program containing functions that other programs can call. This .dll file can be injected to all running processes and can change or manipulate their behavior. The program has no visible window. The service has no detailed description. It can change the behavior of other programs or manipulate other programs. shlext.dll is not a Windows core file. shlext.dll is able to monitor applications. Therefore the technical security rating is 63% dangerous, however also read the users reviews. Important: Some malware camouflage themselves as shlext.dll, particularly if they are located in c:\windows or c:\windows\system32 folder. Thus check the shlext.dll process on your pc whether it is pest. We recommend Security Task Manager for verifying your computer's security. It is one of the Top Download Picks of 2005 of The Washington Post and PC World. mfc71u.dll file information The process MFCDLL Shared Library - Retail Version belongs to the software Microsoft® Visual Studio .NET by Microsoft Corporation (www.microsoft.com). Description: mfc71u.dll is located in a subfolder of "C:\Program Files". The file size on Windows XP is 1047552 bytes. A .dll file (Dynamic Link Library) is a special type of Windows program containing functions that other programs can call. This .dll file can be injected to all running processes and can change or manipulate their behavior. The program has no visible window. The program can be uninstalled in the Control Panel. The service has no detailed description. It can change the behavior of other programs or manipulate other programs. mfc71u.dll is not a Windows system file. mfc71u.dll is able to connect to Internet, record inputs. Therefore the technical security rating is 50% dangerous. Important: Some malware camouflage themselves as mfc71u.dll, particularly if they are located in c:\windows or c:\windows\system32 folder. Thus check the mfc71u.dll process on your pc whether it is pest. We recommend Security Task Manager for verifying your computer's security. It is one of the Top Download Picks of 2005 of The Washington Post and PC World. msvcr71.dll description Description msvcr71.dll is a module containing standard C library functions such as printf, memcpy, and cos. It is a part of the Microsoft C Runtime Library. |
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#15 |
Rear Admiral
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The short answer is - there is a high likelyhood of you screwing up your computer at this point in time. WARNING!
![]() -S |
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