AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
![]() ![]() You might also want to check "Always allowed to run". In Chrome, if you look under about:plugins, expand details, then find Adobe Flash Player, you should see the built-in PPAPI Flash Player as enabled. The Control Panel is *not* going to help for Chrome, as Chrome is encapsulated and doesn't read from the centralized config files that Flash Player controls anyway, nor does the Flash Player native control panel affect how Flash Player gets launched by the browser. This should get you back to a working state. Immediately run Windows Update again and re-apply the update. Find the latest Internet Explorer update and remove it. You can do this from Programs and Features > Installed Updates. If you *have* manually removed stuff from the machine, the best way to get back to a working state is to uninstall the last Internet Explorer update on your machine, then re-install it from Windows Update. I have Win10 installed at the moment so I can't give you precise directions, but if you launch the start menu and type "Flash Player", the control panel entry should show up on the search list unless you've followed some old instructions on the Internet about manually removing Flash Player (in which case, you've probably damaged the installation). The Flash Player control panel icon should be built into the OS by default. On Windows 8.1, Flash Player is also a built-in component of Internet Explorer, so there's nothing to download and install there, either. ![]()
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |