Software Removal Perfection Comes In Many Different Forms
Paul Watson, PC Technician
Thursday, March 18th 2010Many different things can cause software removal failure. A corrupted program component can throw off the Add/Remove Programs tool. A missing or damaged install log can eliminate valuable clues. Some software simply doesn’t want to be removed.
In the absence of time to understand the problem, my goal is to fix the problem. For stubborn software removal, or software removal failure, I always turn to Perfect Uninstaller because I’ve found it to be the ideal software removal tool.
Perfect Uninstaller sees what the Add/Remove Programs tool doesn’t see and removes what other third-party software removal tools don’t remove. With Perfect Uninstaller, nothing gets left behind. All program files are gone, all registry entries are gone, all program components like libraries are gone. And gone means gone for good.
Perfect Uninstaller also has the advantage of being easy to understand and easy to use. You don’t have to do anything other than install it and identify the software you want removed. Perfect Uninstaller doesn’t ask a bunch of questions or fail when it comes to removing programs. For the few programs that aren’t removable with the standard Perfect Uninstaller remover, there’s Force Uninstall.
Force Uninstall works. I don’t know how else to put it. Force Uninstall simply removes all of the software that other removers won’t or can’t touch. Gone is gone, and gone is good with Perfect Uninstaller. That’s why I use it myself and I recommend it for use with any Windows PC.
Perfect Uninstaller will provide access to all files on the computer. Choose the offending program from a list, a group of icons or by the program details. Once you’ve identified the program(s) you want removed, press the button and that’s it.
Perfect Uninstaller goes after the old, empty or corrupted registry entries, too. Nothing, and I mean nothing, gets left behind. More than 1,000,000 downloads of Perfect Uninstaller means that the program works like it says. It’s also easy to use … perfect for the novice user.
Photo Credit: Kaiton, via Flickr


