Browser version?  OS?  All I can speak for is IE5/6 and 98
variants.  Go to "add/remove programs" and find the IE browser
version listed there, click "add/remove" and you'll see a
repair option there.

I mentioned below where to find the content folder; it's in
the temp. internet files folder and you MUST view the folder
in Explorer to see it.  You should delete it because it's part
of the temp. internet files.

It won't delete cookies you need to keep.  If you DO need to
keep any: while the temp. net files folder is open; "View" by
"internet address" and all cookies will usually be first.
"Edit" then "select all", then hold the control key down while
'dragging' the cursor over the cookies to DEselect them, then
'delete'.  Then you check out what cookies you want to keep
(like any of you banking sites, cr*dit card sites,
etc....sites that require a login that you may not recall the
login).
-Clint

God Bless Us All
Clint Hamilton, Owner
Want to exchange links with us?
http://OrpheusComputing.com �

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Can you tell me what the IE Repair tool is and where you can
get it?

Also, where do I find the content.IE file, and why should I
delete it?


bob rosenblum

----------------------
It's always been the other way around for me...IE6 being
several times
faster than NS and with any Windows OS. Have you run the IE
repair
tool, dumped your temp. internet files folder AND deleted the
'content.IE5' folder? That folder can ONLY be seen in
Explorer. You
may also have the area checked where it checks for IE updates
automatically, and the incorrect setting in the area in the
options where it
states how IE should check for a webpage's updated versions.
Can't
find that area now, but it says something like 'check for
webpage
updates': ................'every time you start IE'; 'every
visit to a page' and
one other option. There is also a ton of settings that could
be affecting IE
under the 'advanced' tab in 'internet options', as well as the
way it
interfaces with your ISP settings (proxy, no proxy; detect
settings
automatically, or manual, etc). You could also try to click
the button
'reset web settings'. If you can't find any of that, that
helps you, you may
just have a bad/corrupted install of IE.
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