I dont think that this is a article should be deleted. It is a well known and award winning software. The reason why i wrote this is because there is nothing that can be compared to it and the software is superior to the standard windows device manager.
I'm curious to know if anyone has used a freeware utility called Device Remover by a guy named Kerem Gumrukcu? I thought it was a fantastic suite of tools that gave you a lot of in-depth system...
I'm curious to know if anyone has used a freeware utility called Device Remover by a guy named Kerem Gumrukcu? I thought it was a fantastic suite of tools that gave you a lot of in-depth system information and control that you couldn't normally get otherwise.
I ask because as of a few years ago, as far as I can tell, the author (Kerem) and the software have very nearly disappeared from the internet. His website is practically empty, and I can't seem to find out if he himself is ok.
I've never used it before, but you can download it from an old version of the page on the Internet Archive here. Have you tried emailing him at the address on the archived page? On a different...
I've never used it before, but you can download it from an old version of the page on the Internet Archive here. Have you tried emailing him at the address on the archived page?
On a different note, I'm a little surprised such a stub-like Wikipedia page survived for so long and has met the notability guidelines.
Wow, you're right – the last non-automated edit was over three years ago, and there are no links to it anywhere else on Wikipedia. I've marked it as a stub, so maybe someone will find it and fix...
I'm a little surprised such a stub-like Wikipedia page survived for so long and has met the notability guidelines.
Wow, you're right – the last non-automated edit was over three years ago, and there are no links to it anywhere else on Wikipedia.
I've marked it as a stub, so maybe someone will find it and fix it up (or propose it for deletion) at some point in the future.
This looks to be his GitHub profile: https://github.com/KerryGee/ - the top repo has his full name and email openly listed, so I figure it's fair to consider it public information. It doesn't...
This looks to be his GitHub profile: https://github.com/KerryGee/ - the top repo has his full name and email openly listed, so I figure it's fair to consider it public information.
It doesn't mention Device Remover, but perhaps if you contacted him through there he'd be willing to create a public repo that others can fork, even if he's not interested in maintaining it further.
This is what is written in the Talk tab:
Huh. And that was actually written by the dude who at least created the Wikipedia page.
I'm curious to know if anyone has used a freeware utility called Device Remover by a guy named Kerem Gumrukcu? I thought it was a fantastic suite of tools that gave you a lot of in-depth system information and control that you couldn't normally get otherwise.
I ask because as of a few years ago, as far as I can tell, the author (Kerem) and the software have very nearly disappeared from the internet. His website is practically empty, and I can't seem to find out if he himself is ok.
Anyone ever used this program before?
I've never used it before, but you can download it from an old version of the page on the Internet Archive here. Have you tried emailing him at the address on the archived page?
On a different note, I'm a little surprised such a stub-like Wikipedia page survived for so long and has met the notability guidelines.
Wow, you're right – the last non-automated edit was over three years ago, and there are no links to it anywhere else on Wikipedia.
I've marked it as a stub, so maybe someone will find it and fix it up (or propose it for deletion) at some point in the future.
I sent an email nearly 3 years ago as far as I can tell, no response. Yikes... Thank you for the alternative link!
This looks to be his GitHub profile: https://github.com/KerryGee/ - the top repo has his full name and email openly listed, so I figure it's fair to consider it public information.
It doesn't mention Device Remover, but perhaps if you contacted him through there he'd be willing to create a public repo that others can fork, even if he's not interested in maintaining it further.