No not at all, I'm still awake!  LOL  LOL  What a pain in the ass!  I do 
have 1 suggestion though, you might want to increase your allocation space 
for System Restore points so you can have more than a few.  When you checked 
your System Restore points, did you check the box, Choose A Different 
Restore Point, so more restore points would show than what what is in the 
initial list?  To get to this checkbox you can shift + tab from the initial 
list but, if that doesn't bring it up you will have to use the Jaws cursor 
to find it.
Take care.
Mike

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Adrian Spratt
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, January 08, 2016 2:31 PM
Subject: IE11 installation saga


Hi. I've received several queries off-list about my experience attempting to 
upgrade from IE10 to IE11. I'm about to describe an immensely frustrating 
day with no end in sight, but I want to begin by emphasizing that 
accessibility is not an issue and that you have nothing to lose by trying.



So, I start with the good news. I downloaded IE11 via the link I posted 
earlier. Here it is again:

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/Internet-Explorer-11-for-Windows-7-details.aspx



I note that Mario provides a link to what may be a different page that 
intrigues me, but I think in my case I'm way beyond taking advantage of it.



In any event, to resume the good story. After downloading IE11, which I did 
from the "run" rather than the "save" dialog, the program began 
installation. I'm confident that had it not encountered some as-yet 
undetermined problem, the installation would have completed fine, my machine 
would have rebooted, perhaps there would have been a long delay as Windows 
reconfigured, but ultimately the machine would have returned in good health 
and with IE11 running.



In short, don't go by the rest of my experience. If IE11 doesn't install, 
you lose nothing. IE10 continues to work fine, and your system shouldn't 
otherwise be affected.



Okay, now for the saga. Kimber was kind enough to post a reminder of the 
Microsoft Accessibility number, so I called. During the course of two hours, 
the rep repeated everything I'd done on my own and came to the same point. 
She added a system check and, although I had some difficulty understanding 
her (she kept speaking away from the mouthpiece), I believe she also did a 
repair of IE. The next step, she said, was to run a repair of Windows, and 
if that failed to reinstall Windows. At that point, I said I'd call my own 
tech support guy, in whom I have complete faith. Naturally, he's a busy man 
and he doesn't come cheap, but I thought this problem would be routine for 
MS to fix.



Note. The MS Accessibility person failed to disconnect when we hung up, and 
she also left my system at the administrator level rather than the one I 
normally use. The only way I found to disconnect was to reboot. My first 
Microsoft Accessibility experience wasn't encouraging, but I know many of 
you have had much better results there.



My tech guy repeated the same procedures, but he added at least one. In 
addition to downloading from what I believe was the same MS webpage I used, 
he tried installing via Windows Updates. Whereas I'd gone as far as 45%, as 
did the Microsoft person, he got to 75% before MS sent a message to the 
effect, "too bad."



I then suggested a system restore. Now here, I have to go back to Wednesday, 
when the problem started. I've been having a problem with certain webpages 
at my investment broker's website, and so we set up a tech support session 
for that day. They made two mistakes, looking back from this vantage point. 
First, they assured me that IE10 had the same level and duration of support 
as IE11, which was the only reason I agreed to let them roll my system back 
to IE10. (they were running IE10 and not experiencing the same problem I 
had.) As an aside, it was based on that assurance that I posted my 
optimistic IE10 message here later that day. As we all know now, support for 
IE10 actually expires next Tuesday.



Second, in order to fix a problem that came up (they inadvertently installed 
IE8 rather than IE10), my investment broker tech guys used a restore point. 
A restore point prior to Wednesday would have been a potential lifesaver 
today, but the only ones I have now go back only as far as yesterday.



So, big caveat: Don't trust tech support staff who want to meddle with your 
system. This has been my longstanding rule, and to the extent I violate it, 
I try to keep on top of what they're doing and refuse to let them go ahead 
if I have any doubts. I trusted these guys.



The net result of my experience today, leading into the weekend, is that 
while downloading went fine from several sources, installation kept failing 
and no one can figure out why. Five hours on the phone, none of my own work 
done, and I don't have a solution.



 

Reply via email to