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Other browsers that came later did the same thing.Įventually, some servers looked for the word Gecko – Firefox’s rendering engine – and served Gecko browsers different pages than older browsers. To fix this problem, Microsoft added the word Mozilla to their user agent and threw in additional information (the word “compatible” and a reference to IE.) Web servers were happy to see the word Mozilla and sent IE the modern web pages. However, IE didn’t receive web pages with frames, because web servers just sent those to Mozilla browsers. To other browsers, web servers sent the old pages without frames.Įventually, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer came along and it supported frames, too. Web servers checked to see that the user agent contained the word Mozilla and sent pages containing frames to Mozilla browsers. Mozilla was a more advanced browser than Mosaic – in particular, it supported frames. Later, Mozilla came along (later renamed Netscape), and its user agent was Mozilla/1.0. Its user agent string was NCSA_Mosaic/2.0. To understand why, we’ll have to examine the history of user agents and browsers. The plot thickens: Chrome is pretending to be both Mozilla and Safari. First, let’s examine Google Chrome’s user agent, too: OriginalFilename: ’ll come back to that in a minute. %PROGRAM FILES%\TWEAKBIT\PCREPAIRKIT\COMMONFORMS.DLL File Information : %PROGRAM FILES%\TWEAKBIT\PCREPAIRKIT\BROWSERCAREHELPER.DLL ![]() %PROGRAM FILES%\TWEAKBIT\PCREPAIRKIT\AXCOMPONENTSVCL.BPL ![]() %PROGRAM FILES%\TWEAKBIT\PCREPAIRKIT\AXCOMPONENTSRTL.BPL HKLM\SOFTWARE\CLASSES\TYPELIB\\1.0\0\WIN32\: “%PROGRAM FILES%\TWEAKBIT\PCREPAIRKIT\” ![]()
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