Hello
The CMD32.EXE file is not a part of Windows itself. It is part of a virus, but different vendors give it different names. As your system can't find the file, it sounds like it got installed but was cleaned out by a virus checker, but it didn't finish the job quite.
Go into the registry editor to:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon
and change
explorer.exe c:\windows\system32\cmd32.exe
Apprently I was in the wrong forum. I don't know whether it was a virus or not. The person has a habit to use the
on/off switch instead of correct shutdown. Am sorry that I got into the wrong forum. Have to start at the beginning.
I have a similar problem except I get an Explorer window that points to
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Bin
I think this may have started either after I installed SP2 or after I updated my Norton AntiVirus LiveUpdate program, although I'm honestly not sure about that.
Any suggestions/help would be greatly appreciated.
I looked at your 2nd suggestion and that seems to be more fitting and closer to the problem originally posted here. When I go to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\NvCplDaemon and look at the value data it is as follows:
rundll32.exe c:\windows\system32\nvcpl.dll,nvstartup
Any idea what that means? Should I delete the part of the value after rundll32.exe?
The entry you list seems a normal part of Norton AV. You want to find a line that references c:\program files\common files\bin if you can in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
I found a reference to it under HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Yahoo\SearchHistory (which was when I originally started researching this problem. No other references to that key anywhere.
Dell Tech. support is telling me that I need to do a repair/reinstall of Windows XP. That seems pretty drastic, but I'm willing to give anything a shot at this point.
I have to apologize and admit to a terribly blonde moment (that's my story and I'm stickin' to it). The folder that was showing up on start up was c:\program files\common\bin NOT c:\program files\common files\bin. Don't know how I could have added a whole extra word. Guess my brain was so used to seeing the "common files" folder in the system that my eyes told my brain that's what I was seeing. Anyway...I solved the problem by simply opening the "real" Windows Explorer and deleting the c:\program files\common\bin folder. Seems to have fixed the problem.
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