On 2018-07-14 11:58, Achim Gratz wrote: > Marco Atzeri writes: > Anyway, the only time I've seen similar behaviour was when some other > library was occupying the address space the systems libraries should > have occupied, and the they get some extremely random address assigned > until the next reboot. To do this the other library must however be > loaded pretty early in the boot process. If you wrote the mail on said > laptop, this >> Diese E-Mail wurde von AVG auf Viren geprüft. > might be an explanation for the whole thing. AVG is well known for > intercepting things already during boot and loading a bunch of their > libraries early. Some of it is still done even if you switch it off > completely and some changes to the registry might even survive a > deinstallation.
+1 for AVG BLODA - had to deinstall that years ago, and was slow; only reason I still run an AV is to catch stuff, either in Windows binaries from download sources about which little info is publicly available, or in email which folks I trust forward once in a blue moon, from their greedy or gullible infected friends, who are in the main, clueless or in denial about it. -- Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis, Calgary, Alberta, Canada -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple