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Can I remove IE frommy computer and still get to the internet?
So I picked up a cheapo HP computer to check email and surf the web at home...
It came with Vista and IE of course... problem is IE is festooned with toolbars and loads of other junk I don't need/want. No problem, I just downloaded firefox and use it to get to the web... Just curious if I can uninstall IE and maybe reload a fresh clean version of IE, or does IE run in the background and need to be there to get to the Internet? Don't want to remove IE then be stranded unable to download a (newer) web browser. Thanks in advance! |
Not really.
Have you looked in your Programs & Applications for the tool bars and removed them? |
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I'm guessing you are referring to the upper right hand icon? Tried that and it seemed kinda limited... Thanks |
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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1362413497.jpg |
Just stop using IE and install another browser.
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Download Chrome (Google) or Firefox (Mozilla). Then delete IE--forever.
**edit** For what it's worth, I prefer Chrome to Firefox, but both are superior to IE. |
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I have reason to believe IE still runs in the background when you use Chrome or Firefox and if I delete IE I won't be able to connect (with firefox or chrome). Thus my question... |
You can't really delete IE. It's part of the OS. There are ways to remove it for browsing purposes. I am making an assumption that since you're asking here how to do this on Vista, that it's not really a good idea for you to try this. You can mess up the PC if you do it wrong.
Just install Google Chrome and use it all of the time. Make it your default browser, and move on. |
Scott - FWIW I have used Firefox for years now but never 'deleted" IE. I just don't open it. I don't see it as a problem if I never use it. Never thought of removing it.
I'm not the 'most' savvy computer person so I try not to push the envelope. :) |
Yeah, there's really no reason to fully delete IE--as others have said, just don't use it. I had a laptop (alienware, so basically a Dell) where IE just stopped working; it would never open a web page. Luckily, I'd already downloaded Firefox for some reason or another, so no issues. Ever since then, I never click the big blue "E" on any of my machines, except for when they're brand new...and then the first thing I do is download Chrome.
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Gone...pfftfffffft! Life is good. :) |
Every now and then you may run across a website that doesn't work properly with one browser but does with another. Banking websites for instance. Keep IE around for that.
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Actually I am going to keep IE as a backup, but wanted a fresh install without all the annoying HP added popups toolbars etc.
I just want to remove all that cr*p without having to pick through the software settings for each little trashy gadget they have installed. |
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Just to confirm... I don't use the big E... I browse with Mozilla...
The question is/was if one were to uninstall IE would Firefox/Chrome/Yahoo still work... I gather that the answer is no (for a windows user), I need IE in the background to get on the Internet. As an aside not a big google fan... been using Bing instead. |
OH. Never mind. SmileWavy
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I'd try a bootable Linux live disk, and if all your hardware works, just install Linux and be done with it. |
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If you're worried that it's running look for the iexplorer task in task manager. But you do not need IE to connect to the internet. That's handled by the HTTP service which you can start and stop independently of everything else. Browsers and services using HTTP calls use that as the socket transit. It's an unlisted service in the GUI but you can query it from the command line with the "net" command.
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