Why indeed, if the answer is both complete and unambiguous?
Depends on the definition of "complete". I know what you meant, but plenty of people out there in the CAD world do not, hence the post I made with the screenshots and "more" details. Such as:
+ Exactly where to find the DWORD
+ How to change it
+ Noted that AutoCAD should be closed, which really does not matter, but if someone does the REGEDIT with AutoCAD open, they will not see the results until after a restart.
+ Also provided some simple lisp code for those who may want to use that.
So, yeah, it's MORE information.
Further if a user is so new that they can't figure out REGEDIT, it could be a sign that they should NOT be in the registry editing anything.
Those same users probably shouldn't be using CAD applications either, but the fact is they are.
The real travesty here is that Autodesk doesn't provide a GUI tool for disabling this and that users have to restore to registry editing.