Infognition Screenpressor V2.1 (remove — Only)
Every Tuesday, Windows’ Disk Cleanup would whisper, “Hey, you haven’t been used since 2019.” And ScreenPressor would whisper back, “Remove only.”
It wasn’t a feature. It was an epitaph.
The “(Remove Only)” wasn’t a command. It was a prophecy. infognition screenpressor v2.1 (remove only)
In the uninstall log, a final line appeared: Success. Identity fulfilled. (Remove only).
A single, honest dialog box appeared. No “Are you sure?” No “We’re sad to see you go!” Just two buttons: | Cancel Beneath them, in pale gray text: “This product has no purpose other than to be removed. Thank you for completing its function.” It was a prophecy
And for the first time in three years, Infognition ScreenPressor v2.1 felt peace. It wasn’t a broken tool. It wasn’t forgotten junk. It was a delete button in waiting —and at last, someone had pressed it.
In the dusty corner of the Program Files (x86) folder, lived a piece of software no one remembered installing. Its name was long and awkward, a bureaucratic mouthful: . (Remove only)
For three years, it sat between “Google Drive” and “Halo 2”, watching its neighbors get updates, splashy new icons, and cheerful notifications. ScreenPressor never got any of that. Its icon was a faded gray cog. Its purpose was ancient: to shrink screen recordings into tiny, blocky files using a codec called “ScreenPressor 2.1” that had died when Windows 7 was young.