any ideas?
winxp
unchecking read only and try again still stuck on read only
is it a virus?
or a bug?
any ideas?
winxp
unchecking read only and try again still stuck on read only
is it a virus?
or a bug?
First time I have heard of this. What have you installed lately? What changes have you made lately?
Have you ran a virus scan? Have you tried safemode?
doing virus scan now
tried safemode admin and still the sa,me
havent installed any new programs that relate to this
only games'
Could the files be inheriting permissions from elsewhere? What type of files are they...they're not on a CD are they
thanks for your reply
they are every file and directory on 80 gig drive c:
and on drive d
appears to be a sp1 bug but cannot find cure
others referr to a virus doing this
im thinking format
but i would like a fix instead
http://www.annoyances.org/exec/forum/winxp/t1066845539
Folders in Windows XP cannot be read-only. Windows will never display a regular
check-mark in the read-only box when you open a folders properties, unless the folder
is on a read-only disc such as a CD-ROM. Normally you should see a greyed out check
mark, a green square, or whatever symbol your theme uses.
As Microsoft would say: "This is by design."
The square (or greyed out check mark) for a folder means NOTHING, NO CHANGE, WAITING
FOR YOU TO USE ME. This is because the read-only box in a folder's properties is
only used to apply or remove the read-only setting from all of the folder's files
at once. If you clear the box and click Apply, then the files in the folder will
be cleared of any read-only attributes they have. Like wise for checking the box
to apply the attribute to all files. The square reappears the next time because,
once again, you haven't used it.
FOLDERS do NOT have a functional read-only attribute in Windows. The read-only attribute
is only for files. The read-only check-box for folder properties is a bad and confusing
design. If you want to avoid read-only confusion, check individual files, ignore
folders.
Windows file systems actually use the read-only attribute for a folder to make it
customizeable, but the checkbox in a folder's properties has nothing to do with that.
You cannot prevent a folder's contents from being changed using the read-only attribute.
You can read more about that here:
http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;326549
this sucks
my folders were fine yesterday
time for a format
Sounds like a virus. Format away!
I know I'm gonna get beat for saying this but...I'd use System restore first to see what that does...
thanks rik
system restore is a very good tool
i, however, have disabled it so i won't loose some precious files that i may have forgotten about.
You see it actually removes all .exe's that were not there when you made your restore point.
I have some files in my program directory that oi want to keep so i disabled it.
time for a format.
good ole format
well..
not really a format
im just going to install XP overtop of XP as a new installation.
this will keep all my files on my hard drive intact.
I have 2 - 80 gigs and 4 - 40 gig hard drives that i use off and on
you would think that i could back up my files and format?
it will take me a solid week to organize all this crap.
Mostly demo games shareware crap i havent even installed.
kinda like "I gotta get this!"
and you never try it lol!
I understand completely...I've downloaded things and forgotten them many times. Later I end up deleting them 'cause I don't remember what they are or why I got them...I figured it was just old age with me tho
I think System Restore is the most useful program default in Win XP. It has saved my computer from the dreaded 5 hour reformatt, reinstall, redownload all your programs and updates. I get pissed especially when I accidently instally those pop-up ad programs and when you try to uninstall them, sometimes you'll need to use a uninstaller from the program website but they just won't let you d/l that uninstaller! I just restore and eveything is fine and dandy.
I think you should frequently create restore points just like you should frequently back up your HD. If you find that the restore points take up too much space, just use disk clean up to delete all the previous restor points except the latest one.i, however, have disabled it so i won't loose some precious files that i may have forgotten about.
"Never seem more learnt then the people you are with. Wear your learning like a watch and keep it hidden. Do not pull it out to count the hours, but give the time when you are asked."
~Chesterfield
Originally Posted by egghead
About that....
I have the EXACT same issue.
Please explain then why folders cannot be DELETED until a restart.
For Example:
If I download something, unrar it into a temp folder. Use the files to install something. Finish the install. done. The program works.
Yet, when I go to delete the TEMPORARY folder...OH!! Access Denied!!!
Guess what it DOES delete though? ALL the files inside the folder...
So it can delete the FILES..
but not the folder itself.
I can do it as soon as i restart...
Please do explain this very strange thing.
THank you very much for your time;
Fermmy
Welcome to Techzonez. I believe it sees that folder as still being used by the program until the system is rebooted. Then when it is no longer "needed" it can be deleted.
It's also great for hiding viruses, taking a large space on the Hard drive and slowing down the computer by creating random checkpoints.think System Restore is the most useful program default in Win XP. It has saved my computer from the dreaded 5 hour reformatt, reinstall, redownload all your programs and updates. I get pissed especially when I accidently instally those pop-up ad programs and when you try to uninstall them, sometimes you'll need to use a uninstaller from the program website but they just won't let you d/l that uninstaller! I just restore and eveything is fine and dandy.
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
- Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
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