New
#11
Does not work on 7137
I would recommend people steer clear of EnhanceMySe7en or at least be very careful. it did more harm than good for me on my win 7 RC 32 bit.
It seemed to do the opposite of what I told it. It made my shutdown button disappear, as well locked me from editing my start menu. And all other random changes.
Thankfully most of them were fixed by using XDN Tweaker or Ultimate Windows Tweaker, both great little apps for tweaking win 7.
There's still some things I haven't been able to fix because of EnhanceMySe7en
1) The "my computer" link has dissapeared from the start menu
2) When I open my computer from the desktop I get no drives showing up
3) "My computer" is no longer in the left pane of explorer (libraries and network etc are still there) But it means I can't browse to some of file files sometimes. I can only if it lets me type in an address like C:\windows etc... but in some browse dialogs I'm locked out completely
4) I have logoff, sleep, hibernate, restart options in my shutdown menu, but no shutdown
I made a system restore point before I made the changes,
then when I tried to restore it back, it says there were no points available ...
Thats wierd coz I've made 3 restore points over the last 3 days as I've been changing stuff.
I suspect with the My Computer issue that its deleted some registry keys pointing to it... please let me know if I have any ideas how to fix it. Thanks
^^
Agreed. This thread should be locked and EraseMySe7en added to the 'Software to Avoid' thread. It's total bunk.
I got around to testing this on an old P4 I have running RC x32. It totally hosed the OS.
WarningUsing this software has been known to cause damage/corruption to the Win7 OS. Not recommended.
Hi all
I know this is a bit of "Horses and stable doors" but could I make some sensible advice to people who want to test this sort of software so that in the case of problems etc they can "easily undo" the changes.
1) Especially when testing different builds of W7 and different pieces of software which look as if they do things with the registry / system files ALWAYS KEEP THE OS IN IT'S OWN PARTITION. A decent W7 partition with a lot of apps installed shouldn't be more than around 25 GB.
2) BEFORE INSTALLING take a partition image of your OS using some proper commercial backup software such as Acronis True Image, Norton Ghost or similar. It doesn't cost much and the sheer amount of time you can save is HUGE.
3) Install the software
4) if it doesn't work just restore the image you made in step 2). This should only take around 15 - 20 mins if you backed the image up to another disk.
This type of software BTW can also be run "stand alone" from a bootable CD / USB stick making it also great for a "Bare metal" recovery. If you backed up to DVD's instead of a Disk the software handles multi-volumes automatically -- when one is full it just asks for another (same on restore).
I use Acronis but there are others.
This type of software is FAR FAR superior to the system recovery -- and doesn't even need a running OS to be able to perform a restore.
Cheers
jimbo
able to resolve most of my problems, another fix is here
"My computer" no longer exists - Windows 7 Forums
once I get it back to normal... definitely will be making some sort of backup
Is there a setting in the Vista version to display the Windows version on the desktop?
Download this software: Tweak and Optimize your Windows Vista - Vista Manager
1) Open up Vista Manager and click on Customization.
2) Click on Customize System.
3) Navigate to 'Desktop' and check 'Show Windows version on desktop'.
4) And there it is.
this tweak 7 doesnt remove totally from ur os when uninstalled...