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Used RevoUninstaller and scan to remove Everything-1.4.1.969.x64
Rebooted Win10
Extract all to T:\Appl\Everything\Everything-1.5.0.1309a.x64
Ran Everything64.exe
At first I thought that, just perhaps, Everything thought that drive A: was a floppy drive, but then B: was not indexed; I have files in both A: and B:, neither of which is a floppy drive.
My boot sequence uses the DOS SUBST command to map folders to drive letters for my convenience when I am working on a project.
Thus: "subst U: T:\Greaves\Products\DEVEL\Turing\"
and: "subst A: C:\Users\%UserName%\AppData\Roaming\Greaves"
and: "subst B: T:\Blotter\%DAILY%"
Drive T: is the decrypted version of a Veracrypt partition of the sole physical hard drive on the laptop.
Drive A always takes me to my Roaming Appdata folders (generally INI files for various projects)
Drive B always takes me to a desktop blotter folder, unique for the day. Today the drive B represents "T:\Blotter\20220421"
Drives L, U, V, and W point to active projects and do not appear in the index, which is fine by me, since the host drive T: does appear in the index and I can always find the file that way. Question 2: What should I change in the area outlined above? I have over the years tried checking ON USN Journal without knowing what I am doing. Question 3[/b]:I experimented with my drive L: but (perhaps fortunately) Everything threw up this error message. I can't remember seeing this message over the past nine years of foolish fiddling (grin), but I assume that somewhere between Everything and Windows10 an alarm bell goes off because I have SUBSTituted a drive letter on an encrypted volume. Is this close to the truth?
The only drives I really need indexed are my boot partition (C:) and my data partition (T:).
Thanks well in advance for any insights.
ChrisGreaves