G
Guest
G'day Group,
I'm having an ongoing problem with my browser, Internet Explorer 6. As it
happens I've received all of the error messages listed in this discussion
forum at one time or another. This being the case, when I see the diversity
of possible causes and means of resolution shown in these posts I become even
more overwhelmed and confused as to where to begin to attempt to diagnose and
repair the problem. I'm running XP Home on a Pentium 4 system with 2.5 GHz
processor. I believe the problem began when my AV program, avast! v. 4,
decided that several of the system files necessary for IE and Windows were
infected and deleted them when, in fact, they were not infected at all. I was
wondering if I just reinstalled IE6 and let it repair itself if, if that
would work? I believe I still have the download file on one of my disks or as
a back-up copy somewhere. I am fairly computer literate, to the point of
having manually reinstalled the hives in Xp and things of such nature, so I
believe that, given complete information and instruction there'd be little
difficulty in my applying whatever steps were necessary to repair and correct
the problem. The most predominate message seems to be the http 403, you are
not authorized to view this page, one. But, as I said, I've gotten them all.
Your kind assistance is greatly appreciated,
Michael
I'm having an ongoing problem with my browser, Internet Explorer 6. As it
happens I've received all of the error messages listed in this discussion
forum at one time or another. This being the case, when I see the diversity
of possible causes and means of resolution shown in these posts I become even
more overwhelmed and confused as to where to begin to attempt to diagnose and
repair the problem. I'm running XP Home on a Pentium 4 system with 2.5 GHz
processor. I believe the problem began when my AV program, avast! v. 4,
decided that several of the system files necessary for IE and Windows were
infected and deleted them when, in fact, they were not infected at all. I was
wondering if I just reinstalled IE6 and let it repair itself if, if that
would work? I believe I still have the download file on one of my disks or as
a back-up copy somewhere. I am fairly computer literate, to the point of
having manually reinstalled the hives in Xp and things of such nature, so I
believe that, given complete information and instruction there'd be little
difficulty in my applying whatever steps were necessary to repair and correct
the problem. The most predominate message seems to be the http 403, you are
not authorized to view this page, one. But, as I said, I've gotten them all.
Your kind assistance is greatly appreciated,
Michael