frankbustos
asked on
cuteftp instllation fails
cuteftp.exe - application error
the application was unable to start correctly (0xc0000005) click ok to close application.
on a windows 10 system.
the application was unable to start correctly (0xc0000005) click ok to close application.
on a windows 10 system.
ASKER CERTIFIED SOLUTION
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Wow, that's really annoying. Those hyperlinked "FTP" and "ftp.exe" are from the Experts Exchange platform. I did not add those links.
Try to download again and try.
Can you install on other systems?
What if you log onto the computer as another user? Can you install then?
Did you scan for malware, etc?
Can you install anything else on this system? Notepad++ for example.
Can you install on other systems?
What if you log onto the computer as another user? Can you install then?
Did you scan for malware, etc?
Can you install anything else on this system? Notepad++ for example.
ASKER
no bitdefender, turned off firewall. the same exe i was able to run on another computer, i can install other exe on this computer that has the problem.
ASKER
IS THERE ANOTHER PROGRAM ASIDE FROM FILEZILLA I CAN USE AND DOWNLOAD?
File sharing or really massive file sharing (agency media files, videos, HD photos)? What features are you looking for in a file transfer setup (bandwidth, file size, encryption, document versioning)?
* Dropbox is vulnerable to ransomware attacks -- their revision history is practically useless for files that had not recently been changed.
* Microsoft's OneDrive has no version history to speak of, except for Office-type docs.
* Sync has all the features and history (with "pro" version), but there's no preview function. The encryption keys are stored on your devices, not theirs, so files are much more secure. The "vault mode" is also quite useful.
* pCloud has true Point-in-Time recovery, currently offers a lifetime subscription for $250 with 2TB, and has a great UI. Downside is that client-side encryption is a pricey add-on. Upside is: you get to choose what stays encrypted.
* Dropbox is vulnerable to ransomware attacks -- their revision history is practically useless for files that had not recently been changed.
* Microsoft's OneDrive has no version history to speak of, except for Office-type docs.
* Sync has all the features and history (with "pro" version), but there's no preview function. The encryption keys are stored on your devices, not theirs, so files are much more secure. The "vault mode" is also quite useful.
* pCloud has true Point-in-Time recovery, currently offers a lifetime subscription for $250 with 2TB, and has a great UI. Downside is that client-side encryption is a pricey add-on. Upside is: you get to choose what stays encrypted.
ASKER
thanks