You were very concise with listing all the issues that you encountered, but this is the first mention that you have of having it installed in a non default location. I could also point out that what corporations do with their machines is irrelevant because this is a consumer product.Īs for not necessary to recreate the steps, that is your choice. If you want to continue to argue with me, I can point out that 1.5 billion computers do not have MB 3 installed. Let's not forget there are over 1.5 Billion Windows machines out there. I know many people and even entire organizations who set their systems up in similar fashions.
#How to uninstall malwarebytes windows 10 install
That includes shortcuts in the Start menu and from any toolbar or taskbar put there during the install too - even if installed in the Start menu in some location other than the default - again, as I do to avoid cluttered chaos.įor example, I have a subfolder on my drive and in my Start menu called "Security Stuff" and all my security programs and start menu shortcuts for those security programs go under those locations.
Yes, there is no doubt that Malwarebytes is one of the most surprising anti-malware software as compared to other anti-malware and malwarebytes is safe to use on multiple OS such as Android, Windows, Mac. ANY PROGRAM that provides a "custom" install option allowing users to install in alternate locations MUST already be competently coded to thoroughly clean up after itself from those alternate locations. It's a scanner with a paid anti-malware suite.
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Anyone who knows how to install into an alternate location should already know how to find those locations using File Explorer (Windows Explorer in previous versions of Windows).īut AGAIN - that should NEVER make any difference. It is not necessary for you recreate any steps. There are also "many" who divide a large single drive into separate partitions and then install their programs into one of those other partitions. That does not suggest "most", but there are "many" users with two or more drives (often these days a small SSD and a larger HD) who install their OS on C and everything else on D or elsewhere.