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#21
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WRONG: 93% of all hits came from Internet Explorer. RIGHT: 93% of all recorded hits came from Internet Explorer. No - that's still wrong. Try: 93% of all recorded hits came from agents identifying themselves as Internet Explorer. (And even the correctness of that statement would need to be reviewed in the light of the exact method being used.) Thats actually 93% of hits from agents with "MSIE" somewhere in the browser. If you test for other browser names, they are almost always in the string too and so you can put these down as the real browser if you test enough. |
#22
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Which, of course, we really should not have to do. It's ridiculous! What happened to letting the browser just identify itself as what it really is rather than some black magic string that pays tribute to other types of browsers just because? |
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Remember, just because a browser identifies itself as something, doesn't mean it really is. The Junkbuster proxy and a feature in Konqueror automate the process of masquerading as other browsers. |
#23
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It's ridiculous! What happened to letting the browser just identify itself as what it really is rather than some black magic string that pays tribute to other types of browsers just because? |
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Remember, just because a browser identifies itself as something, doesn't mean it really is. The Junkbuster proxy and a feature in Konqueror automate the process of masquerading as other browsers. |
#24
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What better measure of what software and settings your visitors use than data collected from your visitors themselves? |
#25
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Shawn K. Quinn wrote: [...] Remember, just because a browser identifies itself as something, doesn't mean it really is. The Junkbuster proxy and a feature in Konqueror automate the process of masquerading as other browsers. I often surf while sending no referrer header at all. |
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