>
> Michael Geary wrote:
>
>  That looks like a session ID or some such in the URL. You probably don't
>> want that. I'd recommend using just the base host/domain name:
>>
>> https://browserlab.adobe.com/
>>
>> That would also let Adobe present the BrowserLab UI in your own language
>> instead of English if they support it (and it looks from the URL like they
>> may have other languages besides English).
>>
>
> On Sun, Nov 7, 2010 at 1:01 PM, Philip Taylor (Webmaster, Ret'd) <
> p.tay...@rhul.ac.uk> wrote:

 Nope, didn't work for me : insisted on giving me en-us,
> when I clearly should have been offered en-gb !
>
> ** Phil.
>

Well, they don't have Spanish yet either. I didn't say they have the service
localized to every language, only that the URL structure suggests that they
may have other languages available if you go to the base URL instead of hard
coding the language into the URL.

And indeed, it turns out that they do have at least German and French. So if
you actually are curious to see the localization in action, set your browser
language to either of those and reload the base URL:

https://browserlab.adobe.com/

-Mike

p.s. Admin note: I didn't mean for my comment to trigger a discussion of
Adobe's localization practices - but certainly the original comment was on
topic. If we can help developers find ways of doing their own cross-browser
CSS testing instead of posting "browser check please" messages, that has to
be a good thing, yes? :-)
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