

InCtrl5 took longer than usual to create the post-installation files then show the finished installation report. I closed both then told InCtrl5 that the installation had been completed. The actual installation was very quick… not surprising as the installer is less than 16 Mb.Īt the end of the install, IObit Uninstaller launched itself… and a new IE browser window showing an advert for IObit Advanced System Care. (BTW, the License Agreement shows that you are not permitted to install IObit Uninstaller on Windows 8.1 (or Windows 10 TP).) I removed the tick from the checkbox and clicked on the Run Now button to see what happened.

The arrow points at the tiny checkmark alongside the dark grey text on dark background indicating IObit Advanced System Care will also be installed. Notice the tiny dark gray link (on dark background) for Custom to the side of the great big bright green button with Run Now in large white letters. I used InCtrl5 to monitor the installation of IObit Uninstaller 4.2.6. IE was the only browser installed in the VM. I cleared all temporary files (System and User), emptied IE’s cache and emptied the Recycle Bin. However, that took me to anyway… (At the end of the download another IE browser window appeared advertising IObit Malware Fighter 3. I thought I would have a look at IObit Uninstaller 4 so tried to download v4.2.6 directly from (rather than from or ). And that’s just what I spotted during a quick trawl through the installation log created by InCtrl5. I haven’t been a fan of IObit since I discovered the installation of IObit Advanced System Care also added Spigot adware, an unwanted IE BHO, toolbars for IE and Firefox (Firefox wasn’t installed), settings for Safari (Safari wasn’t installed) plus a monitoring program called ToolbarAcceptRate.exe. Boy, it seemed to work great ! It even notified me it was really digging deep to uninstall ALL ruminants of any software I was looking to uninstall.Īnyone else had experiences with this software,….good, bad, neutral ? Shop owner says she has been using this for quite sometime, and is very complimentary about it. I thought might as well try out this IObit uninstaller. So I had occasion to uninstall these unwanted files that had been downloaded. As it so often happens these days my free download of some sort of Zip file that’s was deemed necessary to open the ‘rar file’ came along with some unwanted crap/tracking software (and no warnings or asking permission to download this ‘hidden crap’). I subsequently attempted to download a very simple program to open up a “rar” file to install a driver for a wireless Tenda W311u stick.

In the process they installed a program called “IObit Uninstaller” I recently had my old desktop computer worked on by a third party (took Win7 off, and reinstalled XP as my computer did not have a fast enough processor for Win7).
