on a similar note...does wiiU have html5? i tried watching a livestreme and it ask for flash player...
Switch to Google Chome... Firefox just isn't that good... (If you hate Google, any chromium based browser should work.)
My browser:
YOUR BROWSER SCORES 511 OUT OF 555 POINTSYou are using Chrome Dev 40.0.2214.69 on Windows 10
You can't just say how "good" a browser is based solely on it's html5 support.
By the way, how are you enjoying your keylogger?
Yes, it does support HTML5 to a limited extent. Chances are that the website you visited either used exclusively Flash, used HTML5 commands the browser did not support and as such the site attempted to switch to Flash or did not recognize the browser properly.on a similar note...does wiiU have html5? i tried watching a livestreme and it ask for flash player...
HTML5 support is only one of the many benchmarks in which Google Chrome comes on top. Yes, it collects location data, that's how it shows you search results relevant to you. When I'm looking for Pizza Hut, I want to be directed to the Pizza Hut two blocks away, not a Pizza Hut in Nebraska. You can disable those features if you don't want to take advantage of them, they're all available in the settings.
Minimal my ass, but okay. If it's up to the user to pick whichever browser suits them, why complain about people using Chrome? On top of that, why complain about people using Windows 10? It's an excellent OS, possibly more so than 8.1, I can't wait for the retail release. Just because you use eccentric OS'es and browsers doesn't mean that everybody else does. As for sites knowing my IP, in the age of DHCP connections and proxying just about every connection for security reasons your point is completely irrelevant.When I said keylogger I meant windows 10.
And I like my tinfoil hat. Even if I've put it on backwards (Nintendo also profiles it's users).
Protip: You won't be directed to a pizza hut in another country, because sites know your IP. Also, filter bubble.
Also, benchmarks alone shouldn't be the reason why you pick a browser, especially now, when the difference in performance between browsers is minimal. Try them, and pick the tool which fits you best.
Switch the User Agent to iPadon a similar note...does wiiU have html5? i tried watching a livestreme and it ask for flash player...
Minimal my ass, but okay. If it's up to the user to pick whichever browser suits them, why complain about people using Chrome? On top of that, why complain about people using Windows 10? It's an excellent OS, possibly more so than 8.1, I can't wait for the retail release. Just because you use eccentric OS'es and browsers doesn't mean that everybody else does.
As for sites knowing my IP, in the age of DHCP connections and proxying just about every connection for security reasons your point is completely irrelevant.
"Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is a client/server protocol that automatically provides an Internet Protocol (IP) host with its IP address and other related configuration information such as the subnet mask and default gateway."You don't even know what DHCP is, do you?
"Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is a client/server protocol that automatically provides an Internet Protocol (IP) host with its IP address and other related configuration information such as the subnet mask and default gateway."
It's exactly what I said it is.
Okay kiddo, if you say so.Except for the fact that countries and regions are given a fixed IP range to use, with which you can determine from which country and region an IP is, so if google is remotely smart, they won't tell you about a pizza hut in Nebraska, unless you're physically there, or are using a proxy located there.
Switch the User Agent to iPad
Probably a poor job on xfinity's part. If they'd just use feature detection and switch to html5 video if supported instead of using ancient UA/OS checks like we're in the late 90s it'd just work...no dice, no mater what user agent i use it still asking for flash 11. damn nintendo need to get the xfinity tv app already!
Probably a poor job on xfinity's part. If they'd just use feature detection and switch to html5 video if supported instead of using ancient UA/OS checks like we're in the late 90s it'd just work...