>>>>One of the installs made on my office PC apparently replaced the subject dll with an older one. Now everytime turn it on I get a message that the current version is older and I must reboot to correct it - but rebooting doesn't correct it.
>>>>
>>>>What is the current version of this dll? How do I get it, and then install it on my PC?
>>>>
>>>>BTW, I' running Windows 95 on a Gateway with a Pentium II 333.
>>>>
>>>
>>>Your best bet is to boot into Safe Mode, and install a current product such as Visual Studio, IE, or even a Setup Wizard install from VB6 or VFP6, to drop the current version of the .DLL in place. It is not a matter of a simple copy to replace the bad version. About the least intrusive install that'll fix it would be the Windows Scripting Host download available at
http://msdn.microsoft.com/scripting>>>
>>>>Thanks
>>
>>Ed,
>>
>> I installed Windows Scripting Host as you suggested in Safe Mode and that fixed the problem. Thanks for your help.
>>
>> Should all installs be done in Safe Mode? I've always just closed all other programs and ran the setup/install in normal mode.
>>
>
>No - I suggested Safe Mode in your case only because it loads almost nothing except the bare minimum native drivers and .DLLs, so the consequences of having an out-of-date file are minimized. In most cases, you want your normal mix of drivers and support files in place during installation.
Thanks for the info, Ed