Error 1772 Adobe Flash
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Issue Solutions Additional Information Applies to : Adobe OnLocation CS Adobe Premiere Pro After adobe flash player error 1722 there is a problem with this windows installer package Effects Contribute Creative Suite CS4 Dreamweaver Encore Fireworks Flash Professional adobe flash player 20 activex error 1722 Illustrator InDesign Photoshop Photoshop Extended Soundbooth Issue When you install Adobe Creative Suite CS4 or a
Adobe Flash Player 21 Activex Error 1722
CS4 point product, the installer reports, "Done with errors." Clicking the More Information button shows a snippet of the log file that contains the message, "Error 1721
Error 1722 Adobe Reader
[or 1722]. There is a problem with this Windows Installer package. A program run as part of the setup did not finish as expected. Contact your support personnel or package vendor." Solutions Use the following solutions in the order provided. If the first one does not solve your problem, then proceed to the adobe flash player 18 activex error 1722 next, and so on. Solution 1: Reregister the Windows Installer service (Windows XP only). Follow the instructions titled, "Reregister the Windows Installer service," in the following Microsoft Help and Support document:"You may receive Error 1721 when you try to remove programs by using Add or Remove Programs in Windows XP," http://support.microsoft.com/kb/891985 Solution 2: Run the Microsoft System File Checker. Follow the instructions titled, "Run System File Checker," in the following Microsoft Help and Support document:"You may receive Error 1721 when you try to remove programs by using Add or Remove Programs in Windows XP," http://support.microsoft.com/kb/891985 Solution 3: Update the user privileges to your temp directory. Important: The temp directory can vary by system. The default paths are shown below. To determine if your temp path matches the default, do the following: Launch the Command Prompt. On Windows XPChoose Start > Run.Type cmd and click OK On Windows VistaChoose Start > Programs > Accessories.Right-click on Command Line a
the Error 1722- There is a problem with this Windows Installer Package. A program run as a part of the setup did not finish as expected...... Solution: Applies to : Acrobat
Adobe Reader Dc Error 1722
DC Issue: While installing Acrobat DC from the Creative Cloud Desktop App you encounter adobe acrobat error 1722 the Error 1722- There is a problem with this Windows Installer Package. A program run as a part of the setup uninstall_flash_player.exe silent did not finish as expected...... Solution: Download Visual C++ Redistributable Packages for Visual Studio 2013 from Official Microsoft Download Center (http://www.microsoft.com/en-in/download/details.aspx?id=40784 ) Select vcredist_x86.exe and download the package. If you're on a 64 bit https://helpx.adobe.com/creative-suite/kb/error-1721-or-1722-problem.html machine navigate to "C:\Windows\SysWOW64\" else navigate to "C:\Windows\System32" on 32 bit machines. If "C:\Windows\SysWOW64" folder exists then you're on a 64 bit machine. Search for msvcr120.dll and msvcp120.dll and rename both files. Don't delete them so that just in case vcredist_x86.exe package fails to install you can rename them back. Now double click vcredist_x86.exe and install it. After installation completes check that msvcr120.dll and msvcp120.dll are now installed back. You can https://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/kb/error-1722--there-is-a-problem-with-this-windows-installer-packa.html delete the files that you renamed in step above now. Don't delete msvcr120.dll and msvcp120.dll Install Acrobat through CC Installer and it should install now Twitter™ and Facebook posts are not covered under the terms of Creative Commons. Legal Notices | Online Privacy Policy Acrobat < See all apps Learn & Support Get Started User Manual Tutorials Ask the Community Post questions and get answers from experts. Ask now Contact Us Real help from real people. Start now ^Back to top Was this page helpful? Yes No Submit No Comment By clicking Submit, you accept the Adobe Terms of Use. Change regionUnited States (Change) Choose your region Selecting a region changes the language and/or content on Adobe.com. Americas Brasil Canada - English Canada - Français Latinoamérica México United States Europe, Middle East and Africa Africa - English België Belgique Belgium - English Česká republika Cyprus - English Danmark Deutschland Eastern Europe - English Eesti España France Greece - English Hrvatska Ireland Israel - English Italia Latvija Lietuva Luxembourg - Deutsch Luxembourg - English Luxembourg - Français Magyarország Malta - English Middle East and North Africa - English Moyen-Orient et Afrique du Nord - Français Nederland Norge Österreich Polska Portugal România Schweiz Slovenija Slovensko Srbija Suisse Suomi Sverige Svizzera T
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"The file ‘installax.exe' is not marked for installation" This post details how to fix this issue, when Flash won't uninstall correctly from a GPO deployment. The Problem I deploy the latest Flash versions through Group Policy, because it's quick and simple. Some time ago, there was a version of Adobe Flash Player (10.1.5xx I think) that began causing problems with later versions. What would happen is upon upgrades to Flash being pushed out, when updating the previous version an error would be logged. The GPO would successfully update the player, however it would continue to try updating every day, every time the computer started. This occurred for both Windows 7 and Windows XP, and got to be quite annoying for my users. When trying to update manually, the error that appeared was: "The file 'installax.exe' is not marked for installation" Here's how I resolved it: Based on various forum reports (http://forums.adobe.com/message/3124297) it seemed to be a problem with Flash leftovers. On a test machine, I uninstalled all Flash versions, and then did a registry search, and removed these items: [HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Features\4E867BFF724E3554CB631AF1E5269AD4] [HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Features\6D98A6046E9005543B07D873D6BD65EB] [HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Products\4E867BFF724E3554CB631AF1E5269AD4] [HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Products\6D98A6046E9005543B07D873D6BD65EB] [HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Features\00B86459180C72B4CA69A0A21353E906] [HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Products\00B86459180C72B4CA69A0A21353E906] These keys are a mix between Windows 7 x64 and Windows XP. After that I manually installed the latest version, and it was successful. Now I needed to write a script that would remove these values and install the latest version. The Script I wanted to run this as a Shutdown script through group policy, rather than trying to push it out to all our clients through a scheduled task or something. This way it would eventually get applied to everyone. I think I'll wait a period of time, and then disable this script and go back to a GPO msi install. I made extensive use of echo and pause statements to ensure it was being applied correctly. Because I didn't want a script for Windows 7 x64 and a separate one for Windows XP, there's a bit of logic thrown in to check for version. Here's the script: :: Adobe flash giving "installax" errors when updating from GPO :: This batch f