![lazesoft windows recovery cant click next lazesoft windows recovery cant click next](https://www.lazesoft.com/images/recovery-suite-welcome-screen-auto.png)
- #LAZESOFT WINDOWS RECOVERY CANT CLICK NEXT SOFTWARE#
- #LAZESOFT WINDOWS RECOVERY CANT CLICK NEXT PASSWORD#
The iso image can be burned with most burning software - if you don't have any check out ImgBurn.
#LAZESOFT WINDOWS RECOVERY CANT CLICK NEXT PASSWORD#
The extracted or expanded files include a couple of simple html docs, the iso disc image, & the Lazesoft Recover My Password setup file. As usual, chances are this self extractor isn't set to put the files where you want them - don't just press enter or you might have fun finding them afterward. Running the GOTD setup.exe file brings up the WinRAR self extractor after 1st calling home, & that's what some comments talk about with the text not being in English. The Inno Setup installation software causes the only registry entries, which are of the un-install & housekeeping sort. Lazesoft Recover My Password is a downright tiny app, at 641 KB, with the program's folder coming to ~5.35 MB in 14 files. I don't know if millions of people forget their password, want to get into someone's PC/laptop, &/or if resetting someone's password as a prank has reached epidemic proportions, but clearly there's an awful lot of interest. I had come across apps for re-setting &/or cracking Windows passwords before, & I never paid much attention, so today I Googled on "Windows Password Recovery", & got millions of hits. I didn't fully test it, but it did find the other Windows installs on this PC. The docs talk about it working on a multi-boot PC, so you can boot to one version of Windows while re-setting another, but personally think it would work much better along with WinPE on a USB stick. The installed app of course doesn't do any good if/when you're locked out of Windows where it's installed. Once you burn the ISO you'll see a small, bootable version of Linux - the app itself is inside a Linux compressed file system file - & with some work could *probably* have it booting off a USB stick as well.
![lazesoft windows recovery cant click next lazesoft windows recovery cant click next](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/D0fGRoGaAXQ/maxresdefault.jpg)
So, besides the fact that there are apparently a hundred other ways to do this, it seems to be okay. Once you enter the username and password (required every time you use the CD) the program allows you to set the password for any account to blank, so you can then go and log in and reset it. Since the CD doesn't attempt to connect to the website, this username and password will work forever (unlike most GAOD software). Therefore, you need to save the username and password provided in the "readme.txt" file. However, because the CD was created from an iso file, there was no opportunity to register it before creating the CD, and the CD will NOT work without being registered.
![lazesoft windows recovery cant click next lazesoft windows recovery cant click next](https://www.lazesoft.com/images/recovery_suite_screenshot.png)
iso file.īooting to the CD you create is easy enough and the program worked flawlessly. If you only have one instance of Windows loaded on one drive, you will need to create the boot CD from the provided. The only way to reset a program from within Windows is if you have a second drive connected that has the instance of Windows on it that you are trying to recover the password for. Despite the screen that has nothing but question marks for text (which basically extracts the setup files to your hard drive), the setup program (recovermypasswordsetup.exe) runs normally.