you must delete system 32 and everything associated with it, as it causes many glitches on most operating systems.
Go to the %appdata% folder on your computer, then go to .minecraft, then delete the .bin folder.
In computing, AppData is an abbreviation of Application Data.
1. Go and open any file explorer 2. type in (exactly) %appdata% 3. Wou should be in appdata
%appdata% > .minecraft > screenshots to go to your app data folder go on "run" and type in "%appdata%"
On your Windows® device go to: C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WebSetup\ Or >Run >%appdata% >Local >Microsoft >WebSetup Then delete the whole panther file and run Windows® 8 Upgrade assistant and wait until the compatibility check finishes even if it takes a few minutes.
Uh...I don't know why this is in math, as that has no relevance here. %Appdata% is a location on your computer, usually at C:\Users\*Username*\Appdata\Roaming\ where *username* is your computer login. Most of your software won't really run without the files that apply to them here.
C:/ Program Files (x86)/ ...app folders...
Windows XP: Open the start menu, click "Run" then type %appdata%. It will open a folder with Roaming in it. Open that, and then click on the .minecraft file. Windows 7: Open the start menu, and then type %appdata% in the search bar. It will open a folder with Roaming in it. Open that, and then click on the .minecraft file.
GenCrawl.dll is a processe belonging to MediaHolder download manager or General Downloader and most of the time, it will locate:%AppData%\MediaHolder\Extensions, %AppData%\General Downloader\Extensions.
To return to default settings in Vuze, go to the Azureus Application Data folder and delete the Azureus.config and Azureus.config.bak files.To access the AppData folder, click Start>Run and enter %appdata%\Azureus(Since you posted this in a Windows category, I assume you have Windows)You can also access the AppData folder through Vuze at Tools>Options>Files. At the bottom of the page is a link to the AppData folder under Configuration Settings.
Your system is probably looking for a network location called %APPDATA%. The same thing happened to me whenever I tried to install something, so I went to run and typed in RegEdit. I went to Edit, and then find and then typed in %APPDATA%. I then deleted all of the strings except for Default, and then Right Clicked and selected New → String Value. Then In the text box I entered %APPDATA%. The next time I installed something that message did not appear. Hope that helped.
C:\Users\Username\AppData\Local\