This tech note is for version 10 and the uninstaller file name seems to have changed from unwise.exe to uninstaller.exe at some point since then. I don't work on Shockwave and am not familiar with silent uninstall for Shockwave, however, if you're using the Shockwave MSI installer, you can use the MSI commands to uninstall it silently.įor the Shockwave Player EXE installer, I searched in the Shockwave forums and tech notes and found Find current installers for Adobe Shockwave Player which indicates that the uninstaller is saved at C:\Windows\System32\Adobe\Shockwave (C:\Windows\SysWOW64\Adobe\Shockwave on a 64-bit OS). I was going to move this post to the Adobe Shockwave Player (Read-Only) forum for someone familiar with Shockwave Player assist, however, now that Adobe has end-of-lifed Shockwave, the forum has been set to read-only. You're posting to the Flash Player forums, which is completely separate from Shockwave Player. Shockwave and Flash Player are 2 different products. I'm making some assumption here, however, if you provide more information on your specific use-case we can provide more detailed information specific to your use case. If this is the case, you'll want to deploy the custom mms.cfg file when redeploying Flash Player. Note that if you have a custom mms.cfg file modifying the update options, running the standalone uninstaller will reset the update options to the default update options (notification auto-update). The embedded versions are managed by the respective browser vendors.įor more information, see the Flash Player Admin Guide Note that the uninstaller will *not* uninstall the embedded versions of Flash Player (PPAPI for Chromium-based browsers and Flash Player ActiveX Control on Windows 8 and above for Internet Explorer/Edge). To uninstall Flash Player silently, use the standalone uninstaller with the command line -uninstall (e.g. Oh and I have Firefox, google.I'm assuming you're referring to Flash Player, and not Shockwave Player (Adobe Flash Player was only listed once on the uninstaller and that’s what I removed).Īnyway, that’s what worked for me. If we do download it or have a downloaded version in the computer, it freezes up the computer. It appears that Adobe Flash Player is now in the internet parcel (somehow) and we don’t have to download it now. Right away a popup came up that said I had to download Adobe Flash Player - BUT the audio and video on the youtube played just fine without the Adobe download, so I just didn’t download it. I deleted the Adobe Flash player, restarted the computer then went to a music video on youtube. It pulls up a hefty list of “stuff” on the computer. Roaming the internet, I must have tried everything suggested at least once and nothing worked.įinally, I downloaded the free wise program uninstaller. I am really frustrated with both AOL.com and Chrome right now.įolks, I’ve had the same frustrating problem with Firefox - the shockwave crash popup and the computer freezing. So I again must use Safari to print from the NYT because the “box” is not covering up several sentences on the doc I print. Just like when you use Chrome to PRINT anything on the NYTIMES website, the printer-friendly view incorporates a box of “an upcoming and related article you might wish to read”-which covers about a square inch of 3 or 4 sentences at the right side of the printer-friendly document, once you print it. Since I have no problem using Safari to access AOL.com, it seems to me that it is only a Chrome issue affecting ONLY AOL.com’s website. And then I am getting another error message asking if I wish to continue or kill the loading page. Meanwhile, I am prevented from accessing any other sites via a Tab while the AOL.com site (via Chrome’s browser) is spinning. I have noticed only for the past two days and ONLY using AOL.com, I am getting the plugin not working or shockwave not working. Where do I find this: Chrome’s AppData folder.
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