In order to unlock the registry, I had to use Sysinternals: Process Explorer and Right Click > Suspend the exactable that had the key locked. (which requires changes to the reg before the service itself can be disabled.) What it comes down to is that you might have the right permissions in place, but as long as that registry is running, that key/value might be locked in place. I had a similar issue today when trying to kill/disable the service SBSCore. If you know Batch, navigate to C:\Widnows\System32 and right click on cmd.exe. From there you have full access to your computer.įor deleting a driver, navigate to C:\Windows\System32\drivers and delete the driver you want. Once in notepad, click Open from the file menu.Scroll down to the last link (it should be a text file) and click on it.Click on the View problem details drop-down. Wait until another window pops up (this may take a while) that says Startup Repair cannot repair this computer automatically.You will shortly see a window saying Do you want to restore your computer using System Restore?. You should see a menu with a Launch Startup Repair (recommended) option.When you see the Starting Windows screen, force shutdown your computer.Note: If you already have a Windows Recovery drive, you can delete the driver by booting from the drive, opening the Command Prompt, and deleting it using some simple Batch commands (or starting notepad and navigating with an interface from Open on the file menu). I used the notepad backdoor to delete it ( has not been tested on OS subsequent to Windows 7). There was a driver preventing the deletion.
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