![]() ![]() and is then doing something with the TV Client ID, but I'm not sure what "r" is. $rid is going to the TV Installation in the Registry. Token would be the token of your TV Installation Package. I believe the $header is creating a new default Registry Object with the login credentials needed for accessing your TV Account. What I need help with is what exactly the commands are asking for and what exactly it's doing. I'm using the manual method to apply this now, as I simply can't wait : ) ![]() From talking with the TV Technician, I was informed that this is an ongoing feature request with them and they are most likely going to incorporate this with their client somehow in the future. I'm not sure exactly how this will interact with the TeamViewer client in the future but as of now, I plan to deploy this script via Intune.if I can get it tested and working. For those who haven't already found a solution for this, when I had called for support last week, someone at TeamViewer was nice enough to give me the script they are currently bouncing around amongst themselves that addresses this issue. (Plus you can't rule out just what the user may be doing, we have seen in the past users changing things like firewall settings which then cause CCleaner to behave oddly because it can't connect to servers when it wants/needs to).If your reading this and you have TeamViewer deployed in your organization then you'll understand the pain of TeamViewer not having machine name auto updating capabilities. There again it may not be CCleaner at all but something subtly different in the Windows setup on each machine, or in user account permissions, or something of that nature. (For info both my laptops use an old style CCleaner key, same key on both). ![]() Looking at CCleaner itself has to be first, Windows can have too many oddities altogether. I can't think of any reason why any of that should make a difference, but when odd things happen you have to start looking for odd causes and ruling them out if you can. Which is another possibility, is it only happing with multi-machine Pro+? Of course for Pro+ it may be the same key used on more than one machine. One thing that might be worth checking for those who see it on some machines but not others is if the CCleaner licence keys on each are older style (24-character) or the newer style (20-character, 3 groups of 6 plus the two dashes). It's especially interesting for those who see it on one machine but not others, they have something to compare so may be better able to track it down. So while I can't try and test directly I can think of a cople of things. I do have the reg entry - it's off, and stays off. I've never seen it on either of my two laptops. If I've left anything unanswered, please ask again. (But is a great site and does a great service, by the way.) Given the choice, I'd always prefer downloading program files from the developer's site, but that's just me. I have all of my 35 or so programs - except for a couple that fight to be installed on C:\ - (and all my "folder" stuff like documents, downloads, and pictures) installed (not REALLY installed, because they're portable and standalone programs that run without installation) on my D:\ drive, to keep my System drive ( C:\) as system-only as I can keep it, so my CCleaner files are at D:\Utilities I\CCleaner Portable, and that's where I "Extract All" to. When you click Extract All, it will ask you for a "destination," and that's the folder you have CCleaner in. You just unzip that file by double-clicking it, and you'll see Extract All in the toolbar at the top of the File Explorer window. I get an update notice (I have auto-update turned OFF) in my CCleaner window, I close the window and go to, where I'll find two Free versions with installers, a Slim version, and, at the bottom, the Portable version.
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