![]() It doesn’t have to be installed, so you can carry it with you on a USB key or portable drive, or run it from cloud storage of some kind. If you need to research updates you’ll find this useful in your admin toolbox. A program of theirs called Blue Screen View is often used on this forum, and has caused no. I find Nirsoft tools to be pretty valuable in general. In general the answer is Yes, they are OK. For every cookie, the following information is displayed: Host Name, Path, Name, Value, Secure (Yes/No), HTTP Only Cookie (Yes/No), Last Accessed Time, Creation Time, Expiration Time. It also allows you export the cookies into text/csv/html/xml file. it displays the list of all cookies stored by Google Chrome Web browser, and allows you to easily delete unwanted cookies. Installation status (Successfully installed or failed)īecause Nirsoft Releases Windows Update History Viewer, You Should Grab It NOW ChromeCookiesView is an alternative to the standard internal cookies viewer of Google Chrome Web browser.That’s a whole lot more than you get from the built-in Update History output which tells you: ChromeCookiesView is an alternative to the standard internal cookies viewer of Google Chrome Web browser. Note the traffic light status indicators at left (RGY), name, date and status info. It’s still pretty darn huge (click the image to see a full-sized - and intelligible - view, please). Here’s a screen cap that shows fields I believe to be most likely of interest expanded, and those not compresssed. ![]() hResult: error code reported if an update fails or aborts (8 digit hex code, often of the form 0x8024dddd which maps into the class of Windows Update errors)Īlas, the tool is too big (it covers the width of almost 2 27″ monitors if I show all fields fully expanded. NirSofts BlueScreenView is a kind of coroners report on your system.Unmapped result code: result code reported if an update fails or aborts (10 digit numeric code).Revision number: update revision number, where applicable.Update ID: GUID for update object applied.Service ID: GUID for service that handled the update process.Client Application ID: Name of process that initiated the update, usually one of UpdateOrchestrator (WU), Update, Scan for Updates (manual update initiated by user), or Windows Defender (AV update).Uninstall notes: Instructions describing how to uninstall the update.Support URL: Support note for update, when available otherwise, links to.Operation Result: One of Succeeded (green button at far left) Failed (red button at far left) or Aborted (yellow button at far left).Update operation: Usually install, this describes what operation WU ran using the update (uninstall is also an option and will be reported as such).Install date: Date and time the update hit your system.Description: Text info from the KB article blurb describing the update.Title: Name of the update (same as what shows up in the Microsoft Update Catalog, where applicable).
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