Kodak Easy Share

  • Thread starter Thread starter Menno Hershberger
  • Start date Start date
M

Menno Hershberger

How important is it to have this in the startup group? What won't work or
can't be made to work if it is disabled? I've been getting quite a few
computers in lately that have it installed and in the system tray at
startup. To me it appears to be a resource hog. Since I don't use it
myself, I don't really know what its significance is.
 
I took mine out of start up, and simply start it manually when I need it.

Tom
| How important is it to have this in the startup group? What won't work or
| can't be made to work if it is disabled? I've been getting quite a few
| computers in lately that have it installed and in the system tray at
| startup. To me it appears to be a resource hog. Since I don't use it
| myself, I don't really know what its significance is.
|
| --
| --- A Freudian slip is when you say one thing but mean your mother. ---
 
Menno said:
How important is it to have this in the startup group? What won't work or
can't be made to work if it is disabled? I've been getting quite a few
computers in lately that have it installed and in the system tray at
startup. To me it appears to be a resource hog. Since I don't use it
myself, I don't really know what its significance is.

The shortcut isn't important. It can be removed to the desktop
or deleted entirely, running the program manually from the
Programs group.

In addition, Kodak Easy Group behave like adware, making itself
the default picture viewer and also preparing downloaded pictures
for uploading to a Kodak processing center.
 
The shortcut isn't important. It can be removed to the desktop
or deleted entirely, running the program manually from the
Programs group.

In addition, Kodak Easy Group behave like adware, making itself
the default picture viewer and also preparing downloaded pictures
for uploading to a Kodak processing center.

OK... thanks to both of you. I'll take it out of startup.
 
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