M
Michael Moser
Flightless Bird
I suddenly have again the effect that IE suddenly is unable to display
documents that come with an invalid certificate (it's IE8 in my case now,
but I had that very same effect already about a year ago with IE7 and it
drove me nuts since many of our company internal webpages use invalid SLL
certificates and they were suddenly not usable any more with IE).
The effect manifest such, that there is first the warning page stating that
"There is a problem with the website's security certificate". If I then
click on the red "continue to this website" link I DO NOT get the requested
webpage but rather I see a page "Internet Explorer can not display the
webpage" with a URL that reads "res/ieframe.dll".
My suspicion is, that this has to do with an apparently failed or half-baken
uninstallation of Google Chrome (which I had given another test run last
week and then de-installed it. I now recall, that I had done that also last
year without realizing that connection). After Chrome's deinstall last week
in many applications (e.g. Outlook) clicking onto URLs didn't work any more.
I then had to manually fix this by editing the registry and manually
replacing a few entries left over by Chrome with pointers to IE.
My suspicion now is, that this sudden bad handling of non-valid webpages is
also due to some Chrome leftovers.
Any ideas? Suggestions? Have others encountered that as well and maybe found
ways to fix this?
Michael
documents that come with an invalid certificate (it's IE8 in my case now,
but I had that very same effect already about a year ago with IE7 and it
drove me nuts since many of our company internal webpages use invalid SLL
certificates and they were suddenly not usable any more with IE).
The effect manifest such, that there is first the warning page stating that
"There is a problem with the website's security certificate". If I then
click on the red "continue to this website" link I DO NOT get the requested
webpage but rather I see a page "Internet Explorer can not display the
webpage" with a URL that reads "res/ieframe.dll".
My suspicion is, that this has to do with an apparently failed or half-baken
uninstallation of Google Chrome (which I had given another test run last
week and then de-installed it. I now recall, that I had done that also last
year without realizing that connection). After Chrome's deinstall last week
in many applications (e.g. Outlook) clicking onto URLs didn't work any more.
I then had to manually fix this by editing the registry and manually
replacing a few entries left over by Chrome with pointers to IE.
My suspicion now is, that this sudden bad handling of non-valid webpages is
also due to some Chrome leftovers.
Any ideas? Suggestions? Have others encountered that as well and maybe found
ways to fix this?
Michael