Friday, November 27, 2009

Internet Explorer shuts down and get this error. C:\DOCUME~1\FRANKJ~1\LOCALS~1\...

When I'm on line with my laptop computer it suddenly freezes up and when I click Ctrl-Alt-Del it shows Internet Explorer not Responding. Then I have trouble trying to shut it down so that I can try again. This is the error message. C:\DOCUME~1\FRANKJ~1\LOCALS~1\Temp\WER4e...



C:\DOCUME~1\FRANKJ~1\LOCALS~1\Temp\WER...



Internet Explorer shuts down and get this error. C:\DOCUME~1\FRANKJ~1\LOCALS~1\...microsoft flight simulator



clear out your cookies, your internet cache, your temp files. there is something stopping it



Internet Explorer shuts down and get this error. C:\DOCUME~1\FRANKJ~1\LOCALS~1\...windows 2000 internet explorer



Follow the file path and delete the contents of the Temp folder (do not delete the Temp folder itself, just the contents).



You can also run ATF, it will clear all your cache in a couple simple steps.



=====================



Cache Cleaning Tool



ATF Cleaner (An easy program to use to clear all old history, cookies, Java cache, etc.)



http://www.atribune.org/content/view/19/...



=====================
when i click ctrl alt del go to the processes tab, look for iexplorer.exe or sumthing along that line and click end process. An easier and more efficent way 2 close internet explorer when it freezes. As for ur problem i dont really know it mite be some spyware program that is slowing it down. I have some really strong spyware on my computer and my internet explorer always freezes when i go 2 it. Ive tried to delete it using anti spyware but it just does go away. So i dont use internet explorer anymore i just use firefox, which even though it sucks monkey *** atleast it doesnt freeze. Maybe try running an anti spyware scan on ur computer.
Get Mozilla Firefox its way better.



Click this link to download:http://www.softpedia.com/progDownload/Mo...



Then click on external mirror 2.
Are you connected to the Internet?



Click Investigate to have the troubleshooter detect this for you. This might take several minutes.



To view Web pages, you must be connected to the Internet using a network adapter or a modem.



To verify that you have an active Internet connection, ping the Internet Protocol (IP) address of your DNS server.



To determine the IP address of your DNS server



Open a Command Prompt window.



At the command prompt, type:



ipconfig /all.



Press ENTER.



The first address listed under DNS Servers is your primary DNS server.



To ping your DNS server



Open a Command Prompt window.



At the command prompt, type:



ping address



where address is the IP address of your DNS server.



Press ENTER.



Note



To open a Command Prompt window, click Start, point to All Programs, point to Accessories, and then click Command Prompt. Or, if you have used Command Prompt before, click Start, and then click Command Prompt.



The ping command sends four packets of information to the address you specify, waits for replies, and then displays the results. Near the bottom of the Command Prompt window is a summary similar to the following:



Ping statistics for 207.46.142.46:



Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 3, Lost = 1 (25% loss),



If three or four packets are received, your Internet connection is working.



If all four packets are lost, you are not connected to the Internet.



If two or three packets are lost, your Internet connection is not working correctly. You might have problems with the hardware that connects you to your Internet service provider (ISP) or local area network (LAN).



For assistance in troubleshooting Internet connection problems, go to the Networking Troubleshooter.



Important



If you go to another troubleshooter, you will leave the Internet Explorer troubleshooter.



Can you ping your DNS server successfully?
Do everything suggested. Clear out your cookies and so on, delete everything in your Temp folder (where your IE writes to), get Firefox as at least a backup AND run an anti-spyware program.



What else I'm going to suggest I'm going to suggest although I haven't used Windows regularly since Windows 98 -- I'm on Linux. There is, I believe an attrib command which you can use to unhide files and directories. Go to C:\DOCUME~1\FRANKJ~1\LOCALS~1\... and run it. First back up everything you can, then try to unhide everything in the directory. If it doesn't look like it belongs there, delete it.



I'm putting some Microsoft Documentation for Attrib on an XP system in sources.



Oh, of course this is something to do in an MS-DOS shell, which means go to the Start button, choose "Run Program" and type "command" and hit enter. But also delete all your temporary Internet files. All of them. And run anti-spyware software.

No comments:

Post a Comment

 
nortin