On Thu, 25 Oct 2001, Mike Hicks wrote: > I don't care what people do here. Change it if you like, or don't.. > However, if you change how the browser identifies itself, there may be > strange consequences. You probably only want the user agent string to > be used when retrieving the page, but not when displaying. > > If changing the user agent string causes JavaScript code to identify > the browser as something other than it is, scripts are probably going > to call functions that don't exist or that are broken. > > Not that JavaScript usually does anything useful.. Nice thing about using squid to change it: browser still uses it's own. :) -- Nate Carlson <natecars at real-time.com> | Phone : (952)943-8700 http://www.real-time.com | Fax : (952)943-8500