windows update forces me to type http:// now

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I have all the latest updates and I can still type www. without the http://
and get to websites, are you sure you have not changed a setting on your
browser because this behaviour is certainly not from the latest updates.

Andy W
 
When I installed the lastest updates my address bar did not respond at all.
Also, from the start menu trying to use explore, the system freezes. My
Norton firewall icon disappered from the task bar but not my Norton
anti-virus. Apparently, like others I was forced to use System Restore and
things returned to normal. Something in this update package is causing lots
of people problems.
 
Hi,

I have checked the registry: all the mentioned entries present, however
whatever has been broken by the yesterday's win-update is stil broken - we
have to type prefix to the URL.

Any other suggestions?
 
Do you have an HP Scanner? I have an HP 4600 and (after re-imaging my drive
and starting over) it was the first piece of software that I installed and
was broken again. I uninstalled it and everything works now.
 
1. No, I do not have any HP scanners.
2. If that matters at all for IE6, I have not being installing/uninstalling
any hw/sw last week, except of windows update yesterday.

The url typing worked just fine without http:// prefix until yesterday.
 
yeah i haven't downloaded anything other than the win-update. it's not
spyware either. i don't download anything. anyone have any thoughts on how
to fix it? it's really annoying. makes IE useless.
 
sandi, i looked at the HKEY setting and it was correct. any other thoughts?
thanks for the help.
 
you can hold down the CTRL key and it will take you to where you want to go
without the http://
 
I can't tell you how excited! I am to have found this posting. After seeing
the problem this AM for the first time I was really convinced I had lost my
mind. I am soooo happy to find out we can blame MS for this :-)

I do have 3 quick additional question I am hoping you might be able to
provide additional information on.

1. Does MS know about the problem and is it expected to be fixed? If yes
any estimated time?

2. Has anyone see a situation where you need to type HTTP:// on one machine
that had April updates applied but on another XP SP2 machine IE works
exactly as it should and populates the HTTP:// for you?

3. Has anyone used the Reg fix posted by Sandi (I have not yet) ? I assume
it will restore IE to the same functionality (no need to type http://) it had
prior to the April Updates?

Thanks for the replies to my questions.
 
AS
To question 2: The problem surfaced on my HP Desktop, however, on my Dell
Laptop the problem did not surface. Both are running Windows XP Media
Center. Don't know if this helps, but, thought that I would try. By the
way, Thanks Mike for the solution.
 
Re 2: All machines using IE 6 (both 2k-sp4 and XP-SP2)were affected by the
last win-update. The only machine not affected (XP-SP2) is the one with
IE7-Beta2.
 
Fortunately, my laptop is not using IE7(beta). It was not affected by the
update. I verified through the add/remove option that the update was in fact
installed. It did not affect my laptop as it did my desktop. It could very
well be dependent on OEM hardware/software.
 
From another thread in this newsgroup by Stephen Hui (13 Apr-06):

<QP>
We've determined that the majority of the issues people are having with
MS06-015 / KB908531 are due to a bad interaction between the security update
and a software component included with various HP hardware devices,
including but not limited to printers, scanners, and cameras.

Here are two fixes which should fix problems caused by the interaction with
the HP software:

Option 1 - Modify the registry
------------------------------

- (If you have multiple user accounts set up) Log onto the computer using an
account with Administrator privileges

- Click the Start button, then click Run and type "regedit" at the prompt,
without the quotes; this will start Registry Editor

- Locate the
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Shell
Extensions\Cached key in Registry Editor

- Right click on the key and select New / DWORD Value

- Rename the resulting value "{A4DF5659-0801-4A60-9607-1C48695EFDA9}
{000214E6-0000-0000-C000-000000000046} 0x401", without the quotes

- Right click the value, select Modify, and type "1" into the Value Data
field

- Close Registry Editor


Option 2 - Kill the HP process
------------------------------

- Wait until Internet Explorer, Windows Explorer, or whichever component is
encountering problems is in an unresponsive state

- Click the Start button, then select Run and type "taskmgr" at the prompt,
without the quotes; this will start Task Manager

- Locate any instances of hpgs2wnd.exe or hpgs2wnf.exe in Task Manager, then
right click on them and select End Process

Notes:

- Option 2 this may disable some HP device-specific functionality until you
restart your computer.

- Option 2 will correct the problem for the logged-in user, but not for all
users on a computer with multiple user accounts. For that reason, Option 1
is the preferred option.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If your computer is not currently unresponsive, you should only have to do
Option 1 or Option 2, not both. If your computer is currently unresponsive,
you should be fixed by doing Option 2.

I'm very sorry about the inconvenience this has caused you all; hopefully
this will get things back on track. Please note that MS06-015 fixes a
critical security vulnerability, so it's very important that you reinstall
it as soon as possible if you've uninstalled it. Please also keep in mind
that disabling Auto Update will leave your computer unprotected even after
we release security updates. I understand that this experience has been
very frustrating for many of you, but I really must still strongly recommend
that you leave [Automatic Updates] enabled for your own safety.
</QP>
Source:
http://groups.google.com/group/micr...inetexplorer.ie6.browser/msg/094143b42d0c3ca2
 
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