InCrt5 Program?

  • Thread starter Thread starter david
  • Start date Start date
D

david

I am looking for the InCrt5 program. My computer crashed and I had to
restore the hard drive. I lost the one I had downloaded and have forgotten
the address to the download site. I would like to keep track of my registry
before I start downloading again. I would appreciate any help on locating
the InCrt5 download site.
Thanks
david
 
david said:
I am looking for the InCrt5 program. My computer crashed and I had to
restore the hard drive. I lost the one I had downloaded and have forgotten
the address to the download site. I would like to keep track of my registry
before I start downloading again. I would appreciate any help on locating
the InCrt5 download site.
Thanks
david

You can find InCtrl5 at http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,9882,00.asp .
Unfortunately PC Magazine charges a fee for downloading their programs.

Perhaps you would like to take a look at Total Uninstall instead.
http://www.geocities.com/ggmartau .

HTH
 
david said:
I am looking for the InCrt5 program. My computer crashed and I had to
restore the hard drive. I lost the one I had downloaded and have forgotten
the address to the download site. I would like to keep track of my registry
before I start downloading again. I would appreciate any help on locating
the InCrt5 download site.
Thanks
david

You can find it on these pages:

http://members.tripod.com/sbcserv/downloads.htm
http://www.filelibrary.com/Contents/Multi-Platform/105/38.html
http://www.idicalif.com/scripts3/hf6.idc?teamkey=IDIBASE

I downloaded, scanned with eTrust and compared all three and they're clean.

HTH

Joe
 
david said:
I am looking for the InCrt5 program. My computer crashed and I had to
restore the hard drive. I lost the one I had downloaded and have forgotten
the address to the download site. I would like to keep track of my registry
before I start downloading again. I would appreciate any help on locating
the InCrt5 download site.
Thanks
david
Thank you George and Joe for your quick and helpful response. I'm not quite
sure the difference between Total Uninstall and InCrt5? Will Uninstall
remove the added keys to the registry as InCrt5 when you uninstall a
program? Although there is another program that goes with InCrt5 to help
remove the new registry keys but I forgot the name of the program. I must
admit though I never could get the two to work together. Joe do you happen
to know the name and were I could find this program.
Thanks again
david
 
david said:
Thank you George and Joe for your quick and helpful response. I'm not quite
sure the difference between Total Uninstall and InCrt5? Will Uninstall
remove the added keys to the registry as InCrt5 when you uninstall a
program? Although there is another program that goes with InCrt5 to help
remove the new registry keys but I forgot the name of the program. I must
admit though I never could get the two to work together. Joe do you happen
to know the name and were I could find this program.

Sorry I can't help you with these questions David. Let's hope someone else
will step in and have the answers.

Joe
 
Joe said:
Sorry I can't help you with these questions David. Let's hope someone else
will step in and have the answers.

Joe

Thanks anyway Joe. You have been very helpful and quick with your
response.
david
 
david said:
Thank you George and Joe for your quick and helpful response. I'm not quite
sure the difference between Total Uninstall and InCrt5? Will Uninstall
remove the added keys to the registry as InCrt5 when you uninstall a
program? Although there is another program that goes with InCrt5 to help
remove the new registry keys but I forgot the name of the program. I must
admit though I never could get the two to work together. Joe do you happen
to know the name and were I could find this program.
Thanks again

I have never used InCrtl5, so I can't compare it with Total Uninstall.

Total Uninstall will monitor changes made to the registry and the file
system by a new app's installation. It will reverse all these changes when
you decide to uninstall the program. If the program can't remove a registry
or file entry, it will let you know about it ( it will also tell you the
location and the reason it couldn't be removed).

HTH
 
George Richards said:
I have never used InCrtl5, so I can't compare it with Total Uninstall.

Total Uninstall will monitor changes made to the registry and the file
system by a new app's installation. It will reverse all these changes when
you decide to uninstall the program. If the program can't remove a registry
or file entry, it will let you know about it ( it will also tell you the
location and the reason it couldn't be removed).

HTH
Thanks again George. I think I will try Total Uninstall if it does what you
say. I never did get InCrt5 to work right anyway.
david
 
IC5 will provide a record of each specific key and value that was
added to or changed in the registry. I use another uninstaller myself
but I think TU just give you 'count' of reg changes and completely
replaces it with a previous copy during uninstall. If you don't care
about the specifics of an install or not familiar with making changes
to the registry, TU should be sufficient. I maintain a permanent
record of 'all' by IC5 records so I can refer back to them.
I have never used InCrtl5, so I can't compare it with Total Uninstall.

Total Uninstall will monitor changes made to the registry and the file
system by a new app's installation. It will reverse all these changes when
you decide to uninstall the program. If the program can't remove a registry
or file entry, it will let you know about it ( it will also tell you the
location and the reason it couldn't be removed).

HTH

Total Uninstall v2.34

www.geocities.com/ggmartau

BoB
For the duration of Swen, my address is inoperative.
 
BoB said:
IC5 will provide a record of each specific key and value that was
added to or changed in the registry. I use another uninstaller myself
but I think TU just give you 'count' of reg changes and completely
replaces it with a previous copy during uninstall. If you don't care
about the specifics of an install or not familiar with making changes
to the registry, TU should be sufficient. I maintain a permanent
record of 'all' by IC5 records so I can refer back to them.

Total uninstall also displays the before and after registry values.
You can remove keys from TU's list of changes that you don't
want restored.

It also stores the whole contents of the original key (I think
Inctrl 5 may only store the first 256 bytes or so?)

TU can also export the list of changes to a text file, although
I prefer to extract the registry changes from TU's "TUN"
file format to create a 'do' and an 'undo' registry merge file.

There's a screen shot and more details of Total Uninstall on
this web page.

http://www.geocities.com/ggmartau/projects/projects.html
 
david said:
I am looking for the InCrt5 program. My computer crashed and I had to
restore the hard drive. I lost the one I had downloaded and have forgotten
the address to the download site. I would like to keep track of my registry
before I start downloading again. I would appreciate any help on locating
the InCrt5 download site.
Thanks
david
Thanks George, Joe, Q, BoB and Mel for the quick and helpful replies. I
have downloaded Total Uninstall and will try it out. I enjoy this newsgroup
and think it has the most helpful people.
david
 
david said:
Thanks George, Joe, Q, BoB and Mel for the quick and helpful replies. I
have downloaded Total Uninstall and will try it out. I enjoy this newsgroup
and think it has the most helpful people.
david

I confirm that T.U is the best choice. Since version 2.20, you can
export to a text file all changes.

You can also exclude some folders (TIF, e.g.), not possible with
RegShot or Inctrl5.
The integrated uninstall function makes it easier because you don't
need a second tool as UndoReg (which is good, BTW)
Inctrl5 is no more free, there are a lot of places to download the
free version but PCMAG asks money now.
Pierre.
 
pgriffet said:
I confirm that T.U is the best choice. Since version 2.20, you can
export to a text file all changes.

You can also exclude some folders (TIF, e.g.), not possible with
RegShot or Inctrl5.
The integrated uninstall function makes it easier because you don't
need a second tool as UndoReg (which is good, BTW)
Inctrl5 is no more free, there are a lot of places to download the
free version but PCMAG asks money now.
Pierre.

That reminds me, as some installs require a reboot - it's not
a bad idea to run Total's first pass scan (select installing several
programs and click exit) - restart windows - then complete the
second scan to create a list of file and registry changes to
add to the ignore list.
 
david said:
Thanks George, Joe, Q, BoB and Mel for the quick and helpful replies. I
have downloaded Total Uninstall and will try it out. I enjoy this newsgroup
and think it has the most helpful people.
david
Thaks again Mel & pgriffet. I have downloaded the program and appreciate
your subjections
david
 
I am looking for the InCrt5 program. My computer crashed and I had to
restore the hard drive. I lost the one I had downloaded and have forgotten
the address to the download site. I would like to keep track of my registry
before I start downloading again. I would appreciate any help on locating
the InCrt5 download site.

It's not free anymore.

Official: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,25126,00.asp

However, some places seem to have it. The file name is inctrl5.zip
File size is 785,592 bytes.

If you or anyone else can't find it, please e-mail me and I'll give
you an address I found. (I don't want to post it for obvious reasons.)
 
I downloaded it without the hassle of the PCMag site from:
ftp://ftp.ee.ncku.edu.tw/pub/cpatch/install/inctrl4/inctrl5c.exe
I hope it's still there

Yeah! My trick around PCMag is to find the *.exe or *.zip name listed
in the dl filepath by positioning the mouse pointer over the dl
filepath link (in this case "inctrl5c.exe") and then google for that.
One often finds listings for the same app in plenty of other places!
 
fitwell said:
Yeah! My trick around PCMag is to find the *.exe or *.zip name listed
in the dl filepath by positioning the mouse pointer over the dl
filepath link (in this case "inctrl5c.exe") and then google for that.
One often finds listings for the same app in plenty of other places!

The problem with this is that many webpages just redirect back to the
original site. However, by looking for an FTP download site you are
guaranteed not to be redirected. A bonus is that the FTP site often has
other goodies available. If anyone has any freeware FTP sites which include
freeware please post. I usually use the All-the-Web search engine's FTP
search to find files.
http://www.alltheweb.com

===

Frank Bohan
¶ Put no trust in cryptic comments.
 
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