

In any case, if you believe the report is in error, please report a bug to the supplier of your virus scanner. Commercial virus scanning programs are often confused by the structure of Go binaries, which they don’t see as often as those compiled from other languages. This is a common occurrence, especially on Windows machines, and is almost always a false positive. The launcher it self is written in Go and there is a FAQ from Go about this problem: : The launcher from tinyMediaManager ( tinyMediaManager.exe) is reported from several anti virus programs to be a virus.

tinyMediaManager.exe is reported to be a virus In the area below the users list, activate all permissions. In the list of all available users, choose Users (machine name\Users). C:\Program Files\tinyMediaManager) and choose preferences. Right click on the folder where you have installed tinyMediaManager (e.g.
#TINYMEDIAMANAGER NO THUMBNAILS INSTALL#
If you still want to install tinyMediaManager to C:\Program Files\, you have to adopt permissions for this folder to run tinyMediaManager without Administrator ( you should never run tinyMediaManager as Administrator - there is absolutely no need to do that): There is no need to install tinyMediaManager into C:\Program Files\. the users directory, or any other hard drive/network share). This means that you can simply extract it to your preferred location (e.g. TinyMediaManager does not start from within the “Program Files” folderįirst of all: tinyMediaManager is designed to be a portable application. UI glitches with a remote desktop connection.tinyMediaManager does not respect UI scaling settings from the system.

tinyMediaManager won’t start with Java Portable.The user interface of tinyMediaManager is corrupted.tinyMediaManager can’t connect to the internet via NTLM proxy.tinyMediaManager.exe is reported to be a virus.tinyMediaManager does not start from within the “Program Files” folder.
