Solved Can't install Chrome without Internet

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I'm trying to reinstall Google Chrome on a machine that has no Internet connection (to view local HTML files), but when I ran a new copy of the "standalone" installer, all I got was a low-res drawing of a robot reaching for a screwdriver with the caption

Installation failed. The Google Chrome installer failed to start.
The really strange thing about this is, I found some older leftover installers for Google Chrome on the machine, tried them (from newest to oldest), and found that they all failed now with the same message!

What could cause an installer to fail, when the exact same installer worked without any problems back when it was originally copied to this machine? More importantly, how can I get Chrome reinstalled? Could it be the lack of an Internet connection that's causing the installer(s) to fail?

We've been fairly conscientious about manually installing updates to Windows on this machine, and I've read about something called SmartScreen which causes Windows to check *.exe files on the Internet before allowing them to run - could this new feature be what's getting in the way? And if it is, how do I remove or disable this feature, since there never will be any Internet on this machine for it to check programs against?

UPDATE: I'm getting closer to figuring this out. I've found that each time I've run the installer, it created a subfolder at "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Update\Offline\{random GUID}\{8A69D345-D564-463C-AFF1-A69D9E530F96}", and put another installer in that location. (This happens in the "(x86)" folder hierarchy regardless of whether the installer that was run was for the 32- or 64bit version.) Now, when I run one of these installer files, the installation completes, but it installs for the current user only (at %LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe) instead of in "C:\Program Files" or "C:\Program Files (x86)". Does anyone know how to force an "all users" install?
 
Last edited:

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium (64bit)

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Built 2/11/2011
OS
Windows 7 Pro-x64
CPU
i7-2600 3.4GHz - 3.8GHz Turbo
Motherboard
Intel DH67BL-B3
Memory
8Gb - 2x4GB, Muskin 991770 PC3-1333
Graphics Card(s)
Integrated Intel HD 2000
Sound Card
Integrated Intel 10.1 HD, RealTek ALC892
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus LCD VH222H, Haier HL24XSL2a
Screen Resolution
1920x1080, 1920x1080
Hard Drives
Crucial SSD C300-128Gb,
Western Digital WD5002AALX - 500Gb,
Western Digital WD7501AALS - 750Gb
PSU
Seasonic 650W 80+ Gold Modular
Case
Rosewill Defender
Cooling
Stock CPU, Four 120mm case fans, PCH fan added
Keyboard
Logitech EX100 Y-RBH94 Wireless
Mouse
Logitech EX100 M-RCE95 Wireless
Internet Speed
3.0/1.5 Mbs
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Microsoft Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
Antec Veris Premier-Multimedia IR Station,
Cyber Accoustics-3602 Speakers,
AFT XM-5U Card Reader,
Hauppauge TV-HVR-2250,
Sony LX300 USB Turntable
The link you posted suggests to delete all of the "%LocalAppData%\Google" folder, but isn't that overkill? After all, that would also trash the configurations for things like Google Drive and Chromecast (if I had those on this machine), and trash all of the current user's customizations to Chrome, including any extensions installed by the user.

I'll check out the registry stuff, but I think I'll just move that folder instead of trashing it, and if I get Chrome back to where it belongs, I'll move the newly created folder at that location out and try running with the old configuration back in place.

And I'll reiterate my latest question here in case anyone missed my update to the original post: Does anyone know how to force an "all users" install of Chrome?
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium (64bit)
Can't help you there. I don't use Google products for anything except YouTube and I'm loosing interest in that. :)
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Built 2/11/2011
OS
Windows 7 Pro-x64
CPU
i7-2600 3.4GHz - 3.8GHz Turbo
Motherboard
Intel DH67BL-B3
Memory
8Gb - 2x4GB, Muskin 991770 PC3-1333
Graphics Card(s)
Integrated Intel HD 2000
Sound Card
Integrated Intel 10.1 HD, RealTek ALC892
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus LCD VH222H, Haier HL24XSL2a
Screen Resolution
1920x1080, 1920x1080
Hard Drives
Crucial SSD C300-128Gb,
Western Digital WD5002AALX - 500Gb,
Western Digital WD7501AALS - 750Gb
PSU
Seasonic 650W 80+ Gold Modular
Case
Rosewill Defender
Cooling
Stock CPU, Four 120mm case fans, PCH fan added
Keyboard
Logitech EX100 Y-RBH94 Wireless
Mouse
Logitech EX100 M-RCE95 Wireless
Internet Speed
3.0/1.5 Mbs
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Microsoft Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
Antec Veris Premier-Multimedia IR Station,
Cyber Accoustics-3602 Speakers,
AFT XM-5U Card Reader,
Hauppauge TV-HVR-2250,
Sony LX300 USB Turntable
The link you posted suggests to delete all of the "%LocalAppData%\Google" folder, but isn't that overkill? After all, that would also trash the configurations for things like Google Drive and Chromecast (if I had those on this machine), and trash all of the current user's customizations to Chrome, including any extensions installed by the user.

What if instead of deleting just copy the files to another location (say, the desktop), install, then restore the backup to its original location? That way the installer won't find the files and assume a "clean" install, while the customizations are safe.

Other than that, the next thing I would try is just borrow a computer with a working Chrome install and just copy the its program files folder onto the problematic computer. While it isn't a "formal" install procedure, reality dictates that the vast majority of programs actually work this way.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Toshiba Sattelite A665-S6092
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Core i7-740QM
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 330GT
Screen Resolution
1366x768
Hard Drives
Samsung 840 SSD 500GB
1TB USB3 external HD
Cooling
Coolermaster Notepal U3 notebook cooling pad
Internet Speed
3mbps ASDL
Antivirus
ClamWin 0.98.7
Browser
Opera 12.17 x86 (main), Firefox 38 (sec), IE11 (last resort)
Yes, both of those are already on my list of things to try today.

UPDATE: Just for the record, cleaning out the registry seemed to fix things. As I mentioned above, removing all the Google stuff seemed unnecessary, so I dug a little deeper and only removed the settings that seemed specific to Chrome.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium (64bit)
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