whs <> wrote in
microsoft.public.windows.vista.general:
>
> Suggest you trash your registry cleaner. What were you trying to
> accomplish anyhow? Since I assume that you backed up the registry before
> you were trying to destroy it, it should be an easy fix.
Registry cleaners probably have on rare occasion rescued a badly behaving
Windows system.
The undoubtedly hundreds of them that have come out of the woodwork have
done so probably only because the maker of the OS has created a system
unable to repair itself---the joke called System Restore, anyone??
And please tell me how SFC, which is not really advertised by Microsoft as
a tool for the user to use---can report that a single system file can be
corrupted and then tell the user to try to open some obscure log, find the
file(s) that cannot be repaired, and then thwart every attempt by the user
to "repair" them?
--
Gates' Axiom: The number of posts in a thread discussing a Microsoft
Windows system is proportional to the probability that a superior operating
system for mission-critical needs, such as a Unix system, will be
mentioned.
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