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On 24/03/2017 11:33 PM, Kenneth wrote:
> Orchid Win7 v1<voi### [at] dev null> wrote:
>
>>
>> Well, you laugh, but certain versions of Windows *do* actually treat
>> programs with "special" names differently.
>>
>> [snip] ... If you rename the exact same program
>> to, say, BANANA.EXE, no privilege elevation prompt. It's a workaround to
>> try to make old software still work.
>>
>
> Wow, that's wierd. I probably wouldn't have believed that info either, ha! I
> never did try simply *renaming* Photoshop's installer stub to SETUP32.exe-- I
> thought it might cause grave havoc, or turn Photoshop into an old Atari game or
> something...
>
> Oh, the horror!
To be clear, it definitely won't turn a 32-bit application into a 64-bit
one. I was merely pointing out that renaming an executable *can* cause
Windows to treat it differently. (Basically by changing what backwards
compatibility fixes it applies.) All of this is moot for recent
applications, which contain an embedded manifest that *tells* Windows
exactly what the program wants...
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