The Computer Oracle

Disable Cisco Webex Meetings auto-start

--------------------------------------------------
Rise to the top 3% as a developer or hire one of them at Toptal: https://topt.al/25cXVn
--------------------------------------------------

Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Puzzle Game 2

--

Chapters
00:00 Disable Cisco Webex Meetings Auto-Start
00:55 Accepted Answer Score 15
01:36 Answer 2 Score 2
01:52 Answer 3 Score 1
02:12 Answer 4 Score 2
02:28 Thank you

--

Full question
https://superuser.com/questions/1397828/...

--

Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

--

Tags
#autostart #webex

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 15


The hits from Cisco on this did not work; the interface must have changed--can't find any preferences as they indicate.

The following link worked for me on MacOS:

https://macpaw.com/how-to/remove-startup-items-in-osx

Go to apple menu -> System Preferences then Users & Groups, pick your user then go to the Login Items tab, highlight the app and remove with the - button

The following link should work on Windows 10:

https://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/2944-add-delete-enable-disable-startup-items-windows-10-a.html

right-click in the taskbar, select "Task Manager", select the "Startup" tab; look for your application and click on "Enable" to disable it.

There may be other options available (see the linked web page).




ANSWER 2

Score 2


In Task Manager, I did not see an app listing in the Startup tab for this, but I did see a vague "Program" listing with no information. I disabled that entry and it did not start up upon reboot.

enter image description here




ANSWER 3

Score 2


The "IT Administrator Guide for Mass Deployment of the CiscoWebex WBS39.10 and Later.pdf" states to install with /AUTOOC=0. Worked for me.




ANSWER 4

Score 1


For Windows 7 (no 'Startup' tab in Task Manager as described in accepted W10 solution):

Remove the registry entry in HKCU\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run which points to ptoneclk.exe