![]() ![]() ![]() For the sake of clarity in this example I have renamed the exe to shockwave_uninstaller.exe. Now let’s find that “uninstaller.exe” and copy it to our BatchPatch computer.At this point we need to identify the UninstallString value, which in this case for version 12.1.0.150 is "C:\Windows\system32\Adobe\Shockwave12\uninstaller.exe".In the screenshot below you can see that we have located the appropriate key. However, newer versions of Shockwave actually appear under their own Adobe Shockwave Player key instead of a GUID key. The DisplayNamevalue would contain a string that says something like Adobe Shockwave Player 11.1. For older versions of Shockwave you’ll be searching through the many GUIDs that you see (ex: FF2A5498-4EFE-430F-A138-7EB365DBEBAD) for the REG_SZ called DisplayName. Browse to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall and look for the Shockwave key.Launch the Registry Editor by going to Start > Run > Regedit. The first thing we need to do is locate the uninstall string in the registry on a computer that has Adobe Shockwave installed.The good news is that it’s relatively simple and straightforward. From time to time we get asked how to use BatchPatch to uninstall Adobe Shockwave from a group of computers. ![]()
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