[email protected] wrote:
 > Rufus wrote:
Ray_Net wrote:
Beauregard T. Shagnasty wrote:
David E. Ross wrote:

.. Of course, that will hide the fact that SeaMonkey is in use and
lead Web developers to ignore SeaMonkey.

That's also a reason I frequently dispute folks when they say "just set
it to mask as IE and fuggetaboutit." :-/

If the code in seamonkey *is* the code of firefox, it's normal that he
*must* spoof as firefox.

Not really - I generally spoof as Safari or IE if I encounter a sniffing
problem. Either works just fine, and I maintain listings of Safari and
IE versions under User Agent Switcher.

I believe that Midori spoofs as Safari.

I don't know what the history of Midori is, it just showed
up in a version of Linux and I tried it out.


The User Agent Switcher add-on allows a user to maintain lists of user agent strings and spoof as whatever he wishes, whenever he wishes, using selections from a drop-down menu. One of the other nice things about it is that it always returns to the default string on close of session if the user forgets to reset.

And something I recently discovered about Safari is that this capability is actually built into Safari - but it won't show unless the user enables the Development Tools option. It's there as a tool for testing web pages one develops, but it also works for spoofing on the fly.

--
     - Rufus
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