On a side note: To test this, I had to install Chrome. They trick you into making you believe that you absolutely must use/create a Google account to use Chrome. Well, I have one that I rarely used; when logging in, they tell me about "unusual activity discovered", and that I must absolutely give them my mobile number so that they can send access codes via SMS. Google, go to hell :icon_mrgreen:
Yes, like Michael said, Google is data mining in the extreme. Just so you know, when you installed Google's official version of Chrome as a courtesy it provided you with a unique installation ID. Now, even if you never go to a Google domain again with Chrome they can track you through their ads placed on most every web page on the internet. That's why I'm using Iron instead of Chrome. Chrome is open source, and Google merely makes some tracking changes for their official installation. Iron can also be run from a thumb drive, with no registry writes, temp files, cache, or anything else written to or used outside of that thumb drive. You don't even have to use an installer. Just do a search of "google" in your registry now, and uninstalling will not get rid of it or your unique installation ID.
Personally, one of my Drawer options on my quick launch is a Host file toggle. Almost every site I go to has little boxes with "Page not found" in it. Oh, another thing, tacking cookies are not deleted by deleting cookies these days, or stopped by turning cookies off. Google "super cookies" to see what I mean. Primarily culprits are flash and silverlight. And no, there are no browsers in which privacy settings has any effect on these zombie cookies whatsoever and the usual blog advice is about universally useless. I don't give a crap what they know about me but anybody that tries to follow me like they do and I'm calling the cops. I use entirely separate sandboxed browsers for Google, facebook, and other such services. These browsers then have wrappers that automatically toggle Host file configs and have their own sets of privacy plugins and such. Many companies are even using hardware/software profiles to fingerprint you without any cookies, super or otherwise. So my profile toggle actually randomizes a bunch of junk fonts to swap in and out, switches various plugins, such as pdf readers (I like SumatraPDF), on and off, and swaps out various user scripts and addons. I still need a better way to fake screen resolutions and certain software version numbers. I even use a UserJS to rewrite Google search results so Google can't see what I clicked. IE I (almost) never use anyway, except for com automated stuff and testing. Some of them probably have me uniquely profiled as a dozen different users.
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Have you considered command line switches for setting preferences? The entire switch could be a single string of boolean zeroes and ones, or larger single digit numbers if you have a multiple choice option. The list could include:
Close app on selection.
Close precious help file on page change.
Use help file reader?browser [0?1].
Always on top.
My preference, in order given, would probably go something like: 10001. My choice in help file readers is not limited to hh.exe.