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6086

January 22nd, 2006 22:00

Runtime Error

My Dell E310 is only 5 weeks old.  Im getting Runtime Error! Program:C\Programfiles\I.Explorer\Iexplore.exe.  This applications has requested the runtime to terminate it in an unusual way.
I have taked google off by toolbar.  Should I take it off the desktop?  Or any other solutions?  Thanks!

2 Intern

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5.8K Posts

January 22nd, 2006 23:00

Hi:

You should uninstall Google toolbar from your Control Panel>Add or Remove Program list, not just disable it. If this is the cause of your problem, people are reporting they successfully re-installed Google Toolbar later without the error returning.

1 Message

January 23rd, 2006 14:00

I have the same problem as well,so I checked my programs list and I dont have google toolbar.Is there something else i should do ?Thanks

2 Intern

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5.8K Posts

January 23rd, 2006 21:00

The Google toolbar seems to be the most common IE extension to cause this problem, but perhaps not the only one. I would make sure that all extensions are disabled.
 
In IE go to Tools>Internet Options>Advanced tab, Browsing section,  and uncheck "Enable third-party browser extensions", click Apply, then Okay,  and reboot.
 
Alternatively, you could download the free Browser Helper Object (BHO) utility called BHODemon 2.0 from:
http://www.majorgeeks.com/download3550.html
 
and run it to selectively disable BHO's one by one, til you find the culprit.

3 Posts

January 23rd, 2006 23:00

I may have had the same problem:   If a second user account attempted to open IE while IE was open on the first account I'd get the "Visual C++ Runtime Library Runtime Error".
I saw a different post and tried their suggestion and it worked.
The suggestion was to go into IE/Tools/Manage Add-ons.   They suggested disabling Browser Helper Objects, restarting IE, then logging onto the other account and attempting to open IE.
I went through several iterations, but it appears that the one BHO that took care of the problem was the McAfee Anti-Phishing Filter.   I disabled it, and re-enabled all others, and can open IE on multiple accounts again.

2 Intern

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5.8K Posts

January 24th, 2006 00:00

Dsolle:

Thanks for that info. Your method appears a bit easier than using BHODemon, but in the end it appears both methods essentially do the same thing- disable a BHO responsible for the conflict.The only advantage of using BHODemon I can see is that it gives a some info as to what each BHO does. And both methods are reversible.

Just to add a bit for completeness' sake, using your method in IE6, click on Tools/Internet Options/Programs tab/Manage Add-ons button, and in the "Show" drop-down menu select "Add-ons currently loaded in Internet Explorer", then selectively click on each entry under the "Enabled" listing to disable, then close and restart IE.

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