Completely uninstall the related program can help solve the problem.
Totally uninstall AVG from your computer can help you completely remove AVG dll files.
1.Missing Shared DLL, Unused File Extensions, ActiveX/XOM Issue, Invalid Default Icon.SukiobitoS
Shared DLL files provide standard benefits for shared libraries, including modularity which permits changes to be made to data and code in one self-contained DLL being shared by a number of applications although no change is personally made to these applications. This is a basic modularity form that permits for fairly compact service packs and patches as well as for larger applications, such as service packs Microsoft Office, Microsoft Visual Studio, and Microsoft Windows.
A DLL is a dynamically linked library - its essentially a progams component that can potentially be shared between many programs. It has no program association, and is managed by Windows itself. A DLL is a dynamically linked library - its essentially a progams component that can potentially be shared between many programs. It has no program association, and is managed by Windows itself.
DLL stands for dynamic-link library. It is microsoft's implementation of a shared library concept in it's Microsoft Windows operating system architecture.
No, Linux has .so (Shared object) and .ko (Driver) files. Shared objects work in much the same way as dynamically linked libraries, except in a much better way that doesn't screw things up. There is no real Linux "DLL hell" equivalent.
Yes, that was actually the idea behind the DLL. A good example would be winsock.dll - the dll behind all the networking functionality in windows, used by tons of applications. Usually a shared dll is stored in \system32, and a reference counter is maintained so that the number of applications actually using the dll is known. The reason: the dll must survive an uninstall, if it is still used by other applications.
Download a compatible version of hal dll file directly. And then remove the damaged one.
.A DLL is used by programs which need the features or functions built into the DLL. Just like we humans use executable programs for the services they offer (spreadsheets to manage data, web browsers to surf the internet) an executable program uses DLL's for the services it offers. People do not interact with DLL's, programs do
You can delete it directly from C:\WINDOWS\system32.
check here... http://www.pandasoftware.com/virus_info/encyclopedia/overview.aspx?lst=sol&idvirus=49891
If the DLL's were created by a spyware program like vundo they would come back unless you remove the spyware.