

We know many of you have strong opinions about tech vendors. Share how you really feel about IT solution providers for 75 points! Spiceworks.Reinstalling will recreate/reinstall the necessary files.Īs discussed in the Snap! and in DailyLlama's recent topic, many are predicting the death of the fax.But is it really dead? Much as we *want* it to be sometimes, are we ready to move to a faxless world?Let's find out. If any of these are left over after uninstalling then you can manually delete them. MacintoshHD > Users > Library > Logs > - and - ZoomPhone

MacintoshHD > Users > Library > HTTPStorages > us. MacintoshHD > Users > Library > Cookies > us. - and - us. MacintoshHD > Users > Preferences > us. - and - ist MacintoshHD > Users > Library > Caches > us.zoom.ringcentral - and - us.zoom.xos MacintoshHD > Users > Library > Application Support > MacintoshHD > Applications > (if it was installed for all users) - or - MacintoshHD > Users > Applications (if it was installed only for the current user) Make a backup of the Mac if you are uncertain about what you are doing. I shouldn't need to say this, but you are responsible for what you do with this info, not me. While it deletes most of the stuff it installs it does leave a few things behind, but these can be manually deleted. You can confirm this, before and after, by navigating to the directories listed below. That said, when you uninstall Zoom it deletes the app, its app settings, and preference files. There may be a problem with the specific user account. I would suggest testing Zoom under a different user account on the Mac. Here are instructions on how to uninstall Zoom in case you need them (see the section for macOS):

For instance, if someone joined a Zoom meeting from that computer previously and used the name "Gloria Stanford", the Zoom software may be "remembering" that (by reading a temp file from its cache) and just automatically populating the name when other subsequent meetings are joined.Ĭan you please try uninstalling Zoom, restart the computer, and then join a new Zoom meeting (re-installing Zoom along the way or use the Zoom download center to install Zoom beforehand)? Sometimes Zoom (and other software, especially Internet connected software such as browsers) caches (temporarily stores) information so that it loads faster and doesn't have to download all new content / ask the same questions each time it connects. I did not understand what you meant by your cached name statement. Only one person uses the problematic MacBook.
