Qh Uninstaller

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Elia Khensamphanh

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Aug 5, 2024, 8:45:11 AM8/5/24
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Malicioustoolbars and plug-ins may record or steal your browsing data, as well as slow down. IObit Uninstaller 13 can remove browser plug-ins and toolbars to protect your privacy. And the enlarged database can identify more malicious plug-ins and toolbars on Chrome, Firefox, Edge and Internet Explorer. In addition, new Browser Notification Block can help users turn off annoying pop-up notification while browsing online, it can give you a smoother online environment.

Disturbed by the spam notifications and intrusive pop-ups repeatedly? You may want to stop them from a single site or from all of the ones on the browsers that you enabled unknowingly. Tick our Disturbing Notifications before scanning. It will list all the pop-ups that you allowed on Windows Apps and websites. With only one click, all of these annoying pop-ups and notifications are be disable on Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, and all the Windows Apps. Congratulations! You've got a more secure, fast, and smooth surfing experience now.


Running Android apps on Windows PC has become officially available with Windows 11. However, the whole installation process is complicated and tricky even with Windows Subsystem for Android. IObit Uninstaller made it so much easier to install Android apps on Windows 11 PC. Simply drag an APK file onto the APK Installer and it will be installed automatically without any additional steps. Besides, the Android apps you installed can be quickly uninstalled with IObit Uninstaller as well.


"If you need a program that lets you cleanly and completely uninstall applications, fire up IObit Uninstaller. This free utility makes it a breeze to delete apps, including stray files that are often left behind when you use Windows to delete software from your hard drive or SSD. Competing free tools, such as Comodo Programs Manager and Revo Uninstaller, perform similar functions, but IObit Uninstaller bests those rivals with its community-based suggestions and ability to remove annoying Web browser toolbars and plug-ins. In short, if you use a Windows PC, you should download IObit Uninstaller to uninstall applications."


"I have used IObit programs for years with great effect ! For this reason I stay with IObit products.I, in the past have serviced and fixed laptops and mobiles (android) and always leave them, with IObit products installed, and ask them to regularly 'hit the big' C' and tell them it will automatically fix and speed up their laptop/computer/mobile! :)I highly recommend the uninstaller (and the latest beta) as a safe reliable program that shifts stubborn programs! Most importantly, remove 'hidden' coding that the programmer intended to leave, which then brings adverts to re-install again!IObit 'ALL' products are safe' and easy to use' most of all look after your PC's."


"I find IObit uninstaller excellent to use as it has all you could wish for. I love the fact that it uninstalls all the left over fragments. It also has a software updater which reminds you when one of the programs need updating, and the fact that it will uninstall batch programs really makes it a winner. In fact it is basically just what one needs to keep your computer good to go."


"IObit Uninstaller is the best software to remove programs on the computer, it is fast and very effective it does not compare anything with basic uninstaller of windows, it seriously cleans all the rest of the program and so there are no delays in the computer. I have been using it for a few months and I do not know how to live without it, I recommend it to my friends and family.Thanks IObit Uninstaller is fantastic."


This is obviously normal sort of behaviour on windows..., but on a Mac is is proving to be more complicated as applications are not technically installed and uninstalled in a windows sense, aka you just copy the .app file into Applications and delete it when you're finished.


I don't think this is the best idea, since the process would be a bit unusual to OS X users. As you noted, most applications are installed simply by dragging a .app file to /Applications (or some other location). Some apps do have an installer, but even apps with an installer only occasionally have an uninstaller; and furthermore, as a Mac user, I'd be immediately suspicious of an app that installed itself and some sort of unknown shell script.


I would recommend against it. You could create an uninstaller but nothing is going to stop a user from just deleting it from the application folder or using something like AppZapper. Most people don't even look for an uninstaller application, they just trash the app, so even if you wrote one there would be no guarantee it'll be used.


Also, I would rethink very carefully your plan to make a cross-platform applications. Cross-platform applications that treat Mac OS as an afterthought and try to push foreign paradigms onto Mac OS are really irritating. If you want a Mac client, keep your backend code, but rewrite the front-end from scratch. Don't use something like Qt, no matter how tempting the portability is.


Whenever I use IObit uninstaller, it makes a restore point before deleting. I cannot find a way to access the restore points. I need to go back to a previous point, and I cannot find a way to access the restore points.


Not entirely, as I don't think what you pointed out seen that can recover files (I guess it uninstall instead)

But one thing catches my attention. Is it possible to recover the files listed in the Uninstall History?


But anyway, I think I know what you mean by restore points. The problem is that I can't find any restore points and I can't create new ones either, and even if I do, it might be deleted on my system for some reason.


That said, if there are important/critical files you are trying to recover,...using the History list, you could try the Undelete tool in Iobit Advanced Systemcare, or some other program designed to recover deleted files, such as MiniTool Data Recovery...etc.


What do you mean by...."has been unable to recover files (or registry entries) using System Restore Point"......You say you have no restore points, and now you say this.


Again another confusing statement..."But to resume, I tried (and maybe still trying) to recover the missing System Restore Points. Because all of them, one by one, are disappearing from the System,"..... If you cannot create Restore points, as you have said previously.....then how can they be still disappearing fro the system??


I suggest. that you download Iobit Advanced Systemcare (from Majorgeeks site) and use it to create a restore point. Also, it may be able to see any existing restore points whic you have (which I find confusing to even say, because you say that you do and don't have restore points.


Unfortunately, this may not now be possible, as so much time has passed since they were deleted, and you have been using your machine a lot, and everytime you write new data to your machine there is a danger it will overwrite the deleted files, and then they are gone forever....but it is worth a shot.


And yes, I know that system restore could not undelete files removed by normal means. But I hoped that, as Uninstaller deleted the program with its registry entries, I could be able to recover the files altogether with them (As it seems it worked last time in the same situation). So my idea was to recover the state my PC was in before the removal, even if it meant trying the impossible or even trying recovering a lost Restore Point.


Regarding the Recovery Tools in general, I might not be searching in the right way, path or file. Maybe the data is overwritten, though I can see files way older than the target ones. Also, Recuva can't show the files readily, either.


They might be corrupted at this point, even if they are still on my PC. And with limitations of the Free version of each software, the job became hard to beat, either I can't locate the correct file, can't preview or recover, to do so, or even it's too large or too damaged.



As you can see, my options are very scarce, or I may not be searching the right way. It might be dumb, but maybe it would be helpful to know where Uninstaller sends the files after being deleted and before they get overwritten. So if you can try to help me further, I would appreciate it.

But if you tell me there is no solution and the files are gone forever, I'll be sad but free to move on by working on the next project or rebuilding this one from scratch.


Its not a program that is included in Ubuntu, you will need to add it but first you must add the repository that includes it. It is not in the standard sources, so you will not be able to find it in the Software Center either. While not an official Ubuntu program I have used it and it worked flawlessly.


I have not personally tried this (as I dual boot), but you can download an uninstaller program. You can look here for information on how to install and use it (see the "second option"): -Uninstaller. An alternative is to use a tool like GParted to format and delete the unwanted windows partition. Be sure to back up your files!


Hello, sorry for a very simple question but I can't find the uninstaller for Retrospect 17 for Mac. It's not in the installer package and I looked around the retrospect website for over an hour and couldn't find.


Unfortunately, I have been using Retrospect for many years so sort of tied to it, but I would never recommend it to others at this point. There is a tremendous amount of troubleshooting and bugs with new releases and I'm not paying to troubleshoot their software. I dread to think what the current retrospect engine is doing to my macOS, and have found that it's better to just have a dedicated mac to run it (single server) and not use the mac for other purposes . Sorry for the rant.

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