Opera won't open
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stevek2 last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
make sure the 84.0.4316.21 folder [has] files in it. Then, I'd delete the other version folders.
I've just tried - while logged in as user/non-admin - uninstalling the old versions of Opera (in Apps & Features).
The two versions of Opera in Apps & Features don't have the same version numbers as in my admin account.
In the local account: 77.0.4054.203 and 84.0.4316.14
In the admin account: 76.0.4017.107, 84.0.4316.19 and .21Uninstalling the older version of Opera in A&F seemed to work except that Opera still appeared in A&F except with a different icon. Trying to uninstall it again didn't work, as if it were really gone.
Trying to uninstall the latest version of Opera didn't work at all. Clicking on Uninstall, I see "This app and its related info will be uninstalled." I click on the Uninstall box, but am immediately brought back to the initial screen.
Seems it would be helpful to uninstall, download a new version, reinstall, and be on my merry way.
I'm confused how I'm able, in my user/non-admin account, to install and uninstall apps. This goes against everything I ever knew about MS accounts.
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stevek2 last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
If you installed Opera for for all users to "C:\Program Files\Opera" for example, then yes, there'd be only one Opera that all users would use (separate profiles of course). But, if you installed for the current-user only (the default), there'd be a separate Opera for each user at "C:\Users\the user name\AppData\Local\Programs\Opera". I don't know which way you did things.
During installation I never saw the option to install for current user only. I looked hard for it, believe me.
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stevek2 last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
So, do this. Uninstall all Opera's (don't choose to delete user data when uninstalling), delete the install folders afterwards if they remain, also delete "C:\Program Files\Opera" if it's there, launch the Opera 64-bit 84 installer, click "options", set "install path" to "C:\Program files\Opera", set "install for" to "all users", uncheck "import data from default browser", adjust the other options as you like, and install.
That will install Opera for use for all users where it will show up for all users. This is the way other browsers install themselves too.OK, will try this. Stand by. Appreciate your efforts to help.
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stevek2 last edited by stevek2
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
It's a really subtle link named "options".
Found it, used it, thanks.
Deleted Opera folders from AppData in local and admin accounts. Then downloaded and installed Opera.
Confess I overlooked your advice to "uncheck import data from default browser" and "set install path to C:\Program files\Opera."
Am not too worried about the former, and don't know how to do the latter.
After install, Opera still won't open in my user account ... wait, I need to see if it works in my temp account.
It does not.
In OperaTest temp account I saw a shortcut on the desktop to Opera, but it didn't have the correct icon and it didn't open Opera. Error message said something about not finding launcher.exe.
What could be causing Opera to work fine in the admin account but not in user accounts?
One is tempted to say something's wrong with the computer (ha, or the computer operator), and that might be it. It all started with a system restore to a date a week back.
I'm starting to get reconciled to never using Opera again. -
burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
You might have to look through https://www.google.com/search?q=windows+10+program+only+runs+as+administrator to see if you can find a solution.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@stevek2 said in Opera won't open:
In OperaTest temp account I saw a shortcut on the desktop to Opera, but it didn't have the correct icon
For the test standalone installation, you just go into its install folder on the desktop and double-left-click its launcher.exe. But, it should have started when it was done installing, so I'm guessing it's not going to run either. But, you can try its launcher.exe directly just in case.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
It shouldn't help, but when on your non-admin account, right-click "C:\Program Files\Opera\launcher.exe" and choose to "run as administrator. I'm guessing it'll run fine that way, but if you goto the URL
opera://about
, and you look at the profile path, you'll see it's not using the profile for that non-admin user, so that's not a solution. But, close Opera and then try to open it normally on the non-admin account again to see if it works. This has worked for some users that have issues like this, but not sure why. -
stevek2 last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
This has worked for some users that have issues like this, but not sure why.
Well, it's good to hear I'm not the only one experiencing this problem.
Not to concede defeat, but it looks like I'll use Firefox until my computer gets replaced one day, at which time I'll try Opera again. -
stevek2 last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
You might have to look through https://www.google.com/search?q=windows+10+program+only+runs+as+administrator to see if you can find a solution.
That's a great link, thanks. Will explore it asap.
By the way, here's a screen print of my admin account's Apps & Features relating to Opera.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@stevek2 When logged into your non-admin user, open up regedit and goto "HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall". You should see subkeys for each of those versions. You can right-click the Opera keys and delete them to get rid of them from the list (you might have to log out and log back in after you do that to see the entries disappear from the uninstall list).
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stevek2 last edited by
@burnout426 said in Opera won't open:
open up regedit and goto "HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall". You should see subkeys for each of those versions. You can right-click the Opera keys and delete them to get rid of them from the list
Did it, and after a restart, the only Opera entry in Apps & Features is now a good red-circle icon and a version number of 84.0.4316.19.
Opera still doesn't work in my user account. Probably works in the admin one, but I didn't check.
Editing the registry just now reminds me I hadn't done it in 15 years at least. Used to be, in my experience anyway, some uninstalls didn't get completely wiped off the computer, so I'd enter a keyword (as in this case, Opera) and search through the entire registry. F3 would bring up the next result. Sometimes it would take a handful of F3s, sometimes dozens.
I appreciate the interest and time you've taken in trying to help me.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@stevek2 said in Opera won't open:
Did it, and after a restart, the only Opera entry in Apps & Features is now a good red-circle icon and a version number of 84.0.4316.19.
Now that you only have an all-users install of Opera at "C:\Program Files\Opera", you should really only have one that says "84.0.4316.21" that comes from "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\Opera 84.0.4316.21". You shouldn't have any now under "HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall".
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@stevek2 said in Opera won't open:
but it looks like I'll use Firefox
Since Opera is based on Chromium, it'd be interesting to know if other Chromium-based browsers like Vivaldi, Brave, Edge, and Chrome run fine on the non-admin account or not.
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