Click the Windows 'Start' button and type 'cmd' in the main menu command text box. Press 'Enter' to open the MS-DOS command line. Type 'cd location' in the command prompt to point to the location of the OCX file.
Box has IE9 and activeX controls load fine. Install IE11 and ActiveX controls do NOT load. All IE settings look unchanged from IE9 settings. Looked at procmon logs for both good and bad PCs.
![Install activex windows 7 64 Install activex windows 7 64](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125445271/338056099.jpg)
Bad PC never shows any registry reference to the Wow6432Node CLSID InProcServer32 key to find control. If I use appwiz.cpl and uninstall the update, IE9 is back and happily loads the controls. As mentioned other similar boxes work just fine. I've repeated the uninstall/reinstall several times with no differences. /steveA registry as 'EnableIEHosting' key for.net 2.0 objects set.
Here's what I discovered. Using dumpbin on 'program files (x86) internet explorer iexplore.exe' it is reported as a 32-bit application.
However when I run it and use either process explorer (procexp) or task manager and look at the process, it is indicated as a 64-bit process! (Taskmanager shows 'iexplore.exe' and NOT 'iexplore.exe.32' and only one of them.) Since the ActiveX control is 32-bit, it should not run in that environment! On the 'good' machine, loading the activeX control shows TWO iexplore.exe (one is 32bit and one is 64bit). On the 'bad' machine, there is only ONE 64bit version! Now, I had done development with IE9/VS2010 and had set the HKCU sw msft ie Main TabProcGrowth key to 0 so I could debug a startup process. However, since IE10, the 64bit browser is the parent of the 32-bit browser so by setting it to 0, I prevented the 32-bit browser from starting in the frame!
For now, deleting that registry key solved the problem. See KB/2716529.
Hi sralpert, I assume these are ActiveX controls that are used on your company's intranet? On the 'bad' PC's with the users account go ToolsInternet OptionsSecurity tabIntranet zone. Is the 'Enhanced Protected Mode' checkbox checked? It should be unchecked (default) for the intranet zone (checked for the Internet and Restricted sites zones). Observe if the 'Reset all zones to default' button is enabled? If it is this indicates that the user has 'customized' their IE security zone settings (in the hope of 'fixing' things).
Clicking this button will reset the users security zone settings to the recommended defaults. If you are using GPO security zone templates, and the users 'Reset all zones to default' button is not enabled when EPM is enabled in the intranet zone, check that the user's Profile is not turning on EPM in the intranet zone by default. To determine the bitness of your Installed ActiveX controls, select toolsManage addonsShow all addons.
![Activex For Windows 7 32 Bit Activex For Windows 7 32 Bit](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125445271/521919373.jpg)
Platform support is shown in the listing. Here's what I discovered.
Using dumpbin on 'program files (x86) internet explorer iexplore.exe' it is reported as a 32-bit application. However when I run it and use either process explorer (procexp) or task manager and look at the process, it is indicated as a 64-bit process! (Taskmanager shows 'iexplore.exe' and NOT 'iexplore.exe.32' and only one of them.) Since the ActiveX control is 32-bit, it should not run in that environment! On the 'good' machine, loading the activeX control shows TWO iexplore.exe (one is 32bit and one is 64bit). On the 'bad' machine, there is only ONE 64bit version! Now, I had done development with IE9/VS2010 and had set the HKCU sw msft ie Main TabProcGrowth key to 0 so I could debug a startup process.
However, since IE10, the 64bit browser is the parent of the 32-bit browser so by setting it to 0, I prevented the 32-bit browser from starting in the frame! For now, deleting that registry key solved the problem. See KB/2716529.
DownloadX ActiveX Download Control is a free download manager ActiveX control used to download files from the Internet or Intranet. To speed up the downloading process, DownloadX will split each file into several segments and download each file segment in a separate thread at the same time.
In cases when connection is lost during the download (or download is stopped by the user), with DownloadX you can resume your download right where it left off. With DownloadX you never need to worry about losing your download, whether you use wireless, dial-up or any other connection. It can be used with any modern programming language (C#, VB.NET, C, VB, Delphi, ASP, ASP.NET, PHP, Java) and containers that support ActiveX controls. DownloadX ActiveX Download Control is a unique solution for downloading files from the Internet or Intranet. It supports all major network protocols (HTTP, HTTPS, FTP and Secure FTP/FTPS) and proxy servers, allowing you to simply specify files you wish to download and wait for the download to complete. Full Specifications What's new in version 1.6.8 Version 1.6.8 fixes memory leak issue. General Publisher Publisher web site Release Date May 19, 2014 Date Added May 19, 2014 Version 1.6.8 Category Category Subcategory Operating Systems Operating Systems Windows NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista/Server 2008/7/8/10 Additional Requirements None Download Information File Size 14.66MB File Name External File Popularity Total Downloads 4,497,718 Downloads Last Week 1,332 Pricing License Model Free Limitations Not available Price Free.