I've had comcast before, theirs along with several other sites say their site does not work with firefox, etc. however, using firefox and changed what the useragent sends does not break the site... In otherwords, it seems to be a simple check to see if your using IE, and if your not, they will tell you the site wont work, even though it really does (most sites).
1) Use firefox anyways
2) go to about:config
3) add config.about.agentoverride
4) set the string to the browser/os you want comcast to see.
Taken directly from TechNet
Who should use BitLocker Drive Encryption?
This guide is intended for the following audiences:
-IT planners and analysts who are evaluating the product
-Security architects So they do not even plan for criminals or anyone else for that matter to use it...nice...
The trick is to try to catch the spam in a net with such velocity that the spam "squishes" through the net to fall on the ground, leaving you with only valid "message" hidden amongst the spam.
That sees these things replacing the the "solar panels" in smaller calculators and other such devices? It doesn't seem that they output enough nA to do much else useful. Perhaps in medical devices such as implantable insulin pumps...etc?
Why not preserve its memory in a virtual world. That way you could use the physical land for something more useful, and still have the digital landmark for everyone to tour... I'm sure someone could make it happen and even profit from it...
LMAO, too much coffee, not enough sleep - wrong thread... i think you know where it goes though.
I've had comcast before, theirs along with several other sites say their site does not work with firefox, etc. however, using firefox and changed what the useragent sends does not break the site... In otherwords, it seems to be a simple check to see if your using IE, and if your not, they will tell you the site wont work, even though it really does (most sites). 1) Use firefox anyways 2) go to about:config 3) add config.about.agentoverride 4) set the string to the browser/os you want comcast to see.
This guide is intended for the following audiences:
-IT planners and analysts who are evaluating the product
-Security architects
So they do not even plan for criminals or anyone else for that matter to use it...nice...
Surely windows has a "backdoor" in the encryption algorithm - whether intentional or in the form of a bug...
You mean _Another_ governmental department is not as secure as the rest of the world?!
Note sarcasm...
My 17 year old sister has better security on her ME box...
Bottom Line-
Police are supposed to be "Model Citizens" that set the example for everyone!
But functionally useless...
**infamous movie style hack root@thishost$ hack 24.75.345.200 && rm -fR * cause you know...everyone has root access in the movies...
The trick is to try to catch the spam in a net with such velocity that the spam "squishes" through the net to fall on the ground, leaving you with only valid "message" hidden amongst the spam.
That sees these things replacing the the "solar panels" in smaller calculators and other such devices? It doesn't seem that they output enough nA to do much else useful. Perhaps in medical devices such as implantable insulin pumps...etc?
How long until these kids find a way to bypass the system and get all the game-time they want?
Why not preserve its memory in a virtual world. That way you could use the physical land for something more useful, and still have the digital landmark for everyone to tour... I'm sure someone could make it happen and even profit from it...
So thats what these kids are calling it these days...
only if he had something to do with clippy should we leave him...