What is the best way of completely removing Logos 4 from Windows XP? Does just deleting the Logos 4 folder (C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Local Settings\Application Data\Logos4) suffice???
Remove it from Control Panel -> Add/Remove Programs, if you want to get rid of all traces yes then delete that Logos4 folder, however if you wish to reinstall Logos4 later and you don't have LDLS3, then it will cause you to re-download all the resource.
Thanks George.
I have Logos 4 running on my Windows 7 virtual machine - I'm removing it from my XP VM to free up disk space. I will keep Logos 3 on XP for the time being.
I had to uninstall on my old xp. Software causes computer to freak and crash numerous times. My computer became unstable until I got rid of it. There are 2 things to delete in add/remove programs for logos 4.
Otto,
Did you find a significant improvement in the running of L4 on W7 vs. XP? I have L4 on XP SP3 with VM3 and contemplating an upgrade to W7.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
Yes, for me L4 loads up to twice as fast and runs faster on Windows 7 than it did on XP. In fact, all my Windows apps are running faster on 7. The upgrade was worth it!!!
Our customer service department claims that systems with XP cause roughly twice as many problems as with windows 7.
Quote: Our customer service department claims that systems with XP cause roughly twice as many problems as with windows 7.
XP Home OR XP Pro?
Steve F
I find this a remarkable statement given that W7 has not been released that long. I was reading somewhere on one survey that said that 60% of machines still run XP with the remainder split between W7 and Vista. (I have read even lower numbers, but I'm using the largest to be conservative) To get a true statistical picture, it would seem that you need to take distribution into account and then segment the fault reports to gain an accurate picture.
Don't get me wrong, it's just "twice as many problems" caught my eye.
Our customer service department claims that systems with XP cause roughly twice as many problems as with windows 7. I find this a remarkable statement given that W7 has not been released that long. I was reading somewhere on one survey that said that 60% of machines still run XP with the remainder split between W7 and Vista. (I have read even lower numbers, but I'm using the largest to be conservative) To get a true statistical picture, it would seem that you need to take distribution into account and then segment the fault reports to gain an accurate picture. Don't get me wrong, it's just "twice as many problems" caught my eye.
I find it remarkable too [:)].
Absolute numbers or percentage of base? Not that I don't enjoy ambiguous statistics. [H]
Absolute numbers or percentage of base? Not that I don't enjoy ambiguous statistics.
Or assertions based on anecdotal evidence. [;)]
Which means there are twice as many XP installations of Logos4 compared to Win7[^o)]