Annoying alert about the default browser


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I have to assume that you are seeing this while using Windows 10 since you didn't give that information. Win10 loves to make one's default browser Edge and has done so to me several times when I have installed a new instance of Maxthon. And I have seen this warning from Maxthon several times as well. I just click the X in the upper right corner and then check Win 10 default programs to see if my default browser has been changed or not. If it had been, I change it back. I would not like it very much if Win 10 had changed it to Edge and Maxthon did not notify me. Not sure what is a bigger annoyance.

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20 hours ago, rick.lane said:

I have to assume that you are seeing this while using Windows 10 since you didn't give that information. Win10 loves to make one's default browser Edge and has done so to me several times when I have installed a new instance of Maxthon. And I have seen this warning from Maxthon several times as well. I just click the X in the upper right corner and then check Win 10 default programs to see if my default browser has been changed or not. If it had been, I change it back. I would not like it very much if Win 10 had changed it to Edge and Maxthon did not notify me. Not sure what is a bigger annoyance.

I said: "Every now and then this alert appears in the Windows 10 notification area", so it's clear that my system is Windows 10.

My default browser is Chrome, I rarely open Edge and I use Maxthon with sites Google's browser is not good at, and for some Maxthon native resources, like closing tabs by double-clicking, Boss Key and others.

AFAIK Windows never tries to change my default browser, it only shows some pop-up suggestion for me to do so, but, apart from this little intrusiveness, it's not a system-wide pop-up like Maxthon's, since it only shows up on some Microsoft websites.

But the most important thing here for me is that I know my default browser is not at risk, so I don't want Maxthon to now and then interrupt me with such a creepy warning.

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1 hour ago, Paultx2 said:

I said: "Every now and then this alert appears in the Windows 10 notification area", so it's clear that my system is Windows 10.

I already in the post right above yours addressed the fact that I missed that. Sorry.

You didn't say that Chrome was your default browser in you OP. And I never implied that you use Edge. So, here are a few other things that come to mind:

When you install Maxthon, do you use the Advanced button and uncheck "set as default browser". Many people just click "Install Now", you probably do use Advanced, otherwise you would also get a desktop icon and a taskbar icon.

In Maxthon in Menu>Settings>General>Default Browser do you have both options ("Check whether Maxthon is default browser at startup" and " Keep Maxthon as default browser") unchecked.

Since you have been a participant here for some time, I would think that these things are already on your radar and are not the cause of your problem, but it never hurts to check. However, even when I have seen that alert, I have never thought of it as "creepy" and have simply dismissed it by clicking the close X.

That's all I can think of right now. Hope you find your answer.

 

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Quote

You didn't say that Chrome was your default browser in you OP. And I never implied that you use Edge.

Dear rick.lane, I said that FYI only, so you all could get the whole scenario, since I didn't before and you mentioned these other browsers in your first answer. BTW whenever I install(ed) Maxthon I never set it as the default browser and I always keep it that way in its settings.

As I couldn't find anything about it on Maxthon's interface, I thought the alert we're talking about here might be somehow hard coded within Maxthon.

So when it showed up today I found in the Windows 10 Task Manager there was this MxUp app running and its properties informed it's located in C:\Users\XXXXXXXX\AppData\Roaming\Maxthon5\Public\MxUp (where XXXXXXXX is my user name in the system). The folder has a config file that reads:

[Maxthon]
LastStart=20180810083950
tips=0
RepairShortcutTime=1
SetDefaultTime=1534164871
RepairTime=1532949660
[MxHotnews]
interval=-1

 

Here's the guy! Now I wonder how I can stop it.

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  • 1 month later...
On 8/10/2018 at 6:54 AM, 7twenty said:

In Menu > settings > General, uncheck "At startup, check if its icon is abnormal"

 

Thanks a lot man. I've already been thinking to remove Mx from my device. This popup is critically annoying. Who could think it's a good idea to do this?

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7 hours ago, vertus said:

Who could think it's a good idea to do this?

I believe the idea is to ensure the startup icon hasn't been hijacked by malware/virus leading you to a fake site, or a fake program on startup.

Not sure how common a occurrence that is, but they felt the need to protect against it. Why people are having it show, what seems to be quite consistently, is something that might need to be looked at. Could be that any change to the shortcut is flagging the warning, when it should only happen if the target startup file is changed. At least that's my understanding of it.

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After I install Maxthon, I go to Settings > General, uncheck At startup, check if its icon is abnormal, then I delete its desktop shortcut, go to C:\Program Files\Maxthon#\Bin\ and select Maxthon via mouse/context menu to pin it to the taskbar.

A lot of work that could be avoided! ► I think Maxthon should give users the option to choose, during the installation, if they want a desktop shortcut or not, like many other apps do. And at this point it should have the option to pin it to the taskbar.

I don't like to have a lot of shortcuts on the Windows desktop, so I organize my stuff this way:

Windows Desktop - shortcuts for apps I use frequently but not every day (office package, CorelDRAW, etc.)

Windows Taskbar - shortcuts for apps I use or need to access quickly every day (browsers, music player, etc.)

 

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23 hours ago, Paultx2 said:

 

23 hours ago, Paultx2 said:

A lot of work that could be avoided! ► I think Maxthon should give users the option to choose, during the installation, if they want a desktop shortcut or not, like many other apps do. And at this point it should have the option to pin it to the taskbar.

Maxthon does give users the option to choose. In the install window, click on "Advanced" in the lower right corner and both of these options are available. In my earlier post above I asked if you use the Advanced option and from your response I just assumed that you did.

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5 hours ago, rick.lane said:

Maxthon does give users the option to choose. In the install window, click on "Advanced" in the lower right corner and both of these options are available. In my earlier post above I asked if you use the Advanced option and from your response I just assumed that you did.

rick.lane, I uninstalled and reinstalled Maxthon to check and you're absolutely right! My bad!

I guess I installed previously without my eyeglasses, so I didn't see the Advanced button... :Flushed_Face_Emoji_42x42:

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2 hours ago, Paultx2 said:

rick.lane, I uninstalled and reinstalled Maxthon to check and you're absolutely right! My bad!

I guess I installed previously without my eyeglasses, so I didn't see the Advanced button... :Flushed_Face_Emoji_42x42:

Now I think that if you go to Menu>Settings>General>Default Browser and uncheck both options and you should not see the "default Browser is at risk" warning any more as I believe the MxUp app is triggered by these settings and kicks in because Maxthon is not your default browser and Chrome is. I am not a total expert on this,  but I think that is what was going on for you.

 

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 10/18/2018 at 6:43 PM, rick.lane said:

Now I think that if you go to Menu>Settings>General>Default Browser and uncheck both options and you should not see the "default Browser is at risk" warning any more as I believe the MxUp app is triggered by these settings and kicks in because Maxthon is not your default browser and Chrome is. I am not a total expert on this,  but I think that is what was going on for you.

 

Both options are now unchecked, but it's still showing up.

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13 minutes ago, DaveMax said:

I discovered a way to stop it. I uninstalled the desktop Maxthon and now only run the portable.

I use the portable version on my laptop. But that's not the point. I think we users should have clear and simple options to stop anyhing annoying to us, don't you agree?

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On 11/3/2018 at 0:32 AM, Paultx2 said:

I use the portable version on my laptop. But that's not the point. I think we users should have clear and simple options to stop anyhing annoying to us, don't you agree?

Yes. There's absolutely no need for the pop-up/nag screen.

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  • 3 weeks later...

I have the CorelDRAW 2017 suite installed on my PC and it also has its nag pop-up. It's there to, among other things, try to convince me to upgrade to the 2018 version.

But–and it's a very importante but–it allows me to reduce its frequency or choose to stop the pop-up altogether:

How to change your preferences for the Corel Update Helper – Knowledge Base

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 12/7/2018 at 9:55 AM, DUNSEL said:

I agree with all the complaints about this, but what I really need to know is, which version of Maxthon do I need to uninstall to get rid of it? Thanks in advance.

Always use the latest portable version (no installation needed). The annoying part of this is that you'll have to check manually for updates, and download them, and set/import your user data/preferences every time you update this way. Oh and delete the previous portable versions folders from your computer, unless you prefer to keep them JIC.

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2 hours ago, Paultx2 said:

set/import your user data/preferences every time you update this way.Oh and delete the previous portable versions folder from your computer, unless you prefer to keep them JIC.

Before you delete the previous portable version folder, just copy the UserData sub-folder from the previous portable version into the new folder, restart Maxthon and you're ready to go. And since I come to the forum every day, downloading the newest version isn't an annoyance at all. In fact, that is how I have updated versions for the last 15 years and never relied on or used automatic updates as I find it gives me greater control as to how it gets installed, especially when it comes to install versions. I now use only portable versions so that control isn't as important as each new portable is in it's own folder and not installed over a previous version.

 

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1 hour ago, rick.lane said:

Before you delete the previous portable version folder, just copy the UserData sub-folder from the previous portable version into the new folder, restart Maxthon and you're ready to go. And since I come to the forum every day, downloading the newest version isn't an annoyance at all. In fact, that is how I have updated versions for the last 15 years and never relied on or used automatic updates as I find it gives me greater control as to how it gets installed, especially when it comes to install versions. I now use only portable versions so that control isn't as important as each new portable is in it's own folder and not installed over a previous version.

 

I use the portable versions only on my notebook, for it has a more limited HD space than my desktop PC's. I think you don't need to copy the UserData sub-folder, that is, if you don't want to. AFAIK, even if a person uses the portable version for the very first time and the user account and data are stored by Maxthon (site/servers), it's enough to enter the login data to get that data synced to the portable version. Of course it's not possible offline.

I myself used to keep a couple or two previous portable versions JIC, because some few old sites I visited frequently wouldn't behave well with newer Maxthon versions. But I haven't had that kind of issues for a long time now.

Anyway, It's a matter of choice.

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