"You don't want to upgrade your Firefox v28 browser (rel. 18-Mar-2014) to Firefox ESR v52.9.0 and/or create a new Firefox user profile with the latest Adblock Plus v3.11.1 as your only browser extension to see if that stops your browser hijack and/or fixes your file download problems.
- You don't want to upgrade your PC Tools Firewall Plus from v6.0.x.x (v6.0.0.88 rel. ~ 26-May-2010) to v7.0.0.123.
- You don't want to upgrade your Thunderbird email client from 17.0.4 (rel. 11-Mar-2013) to v38.5.0 (which seems to be the last Win XP/Vista version according to the support article <here>)
- You don't want to uninstall any software that you don't use on a regular basis"
I never said any of that.
But look back through this thread, I've had a dozen things thrown at me to try, with no priorities. Some I have tried to dismiss as not being viable in my situation, others I question their efficacy at this stage. But proceed on the concept that everything was working fine when this system went into storage, two months ago I bring it out, install a new PS, and, over the next week or so, discover some anomalies ...though 99% of the software, from word processors, to graphics editors, to games is still working fine. So I find it hard to believe there is "massive corruption" when those few issues are mainly related to the browsers and java. Of everything offered, what has priority? What should I do first?
"You don't want to uninstall any software that you don't use on a regular basis"
Define "regular basis"; is it not easier to leave them in place than to install, use, uninstall? In my toolbox are tools I use maybe once a year, but i leave them there (and it's more crowded than my HD).
As for all the updating, I am more interested in finding the problems with what I have, then consider what needs to be updated. (Long a proponent of Firefox, i have come to hate it; it seems that rather than compatibility Mozilla's major concern with each new version is to make absolutely certain it is completely, across the board, incompatible with every existing plug-in and extension, so the end user spends half their time trying to find new versions, usually not as acceptable as the old ones, and then in a couple of months gets to do it all over again.) Install a new Firefox, and the problem migrates to it, then what?
I rarely use Thunderbird, keeping it configured was more trouble than just accessing my email accounts individually (and I'm down to just three now anyway).
Never new there was a later version of PCTools Firewall; it was not compatible with anything later than Vista, and was purchased by Symantec to become part of Norton Suite, so figured what I had was the last. But for now, I disabled the firewall and it made no difference to the issues, so enabled it again.
Edited by originaljgf, 19 August 2021 - 07:01 PM.