That is the idea - that I can have the privacy of not letting the server or web service see my other profiles. As the user, I will not ever let your app cross that line of inquiring into my other browsers or profiles. Moreover, FF, Chrome, Safari, IE, etc do not share the same storage schema for their cookies.
The question remains - why do I want to complicate the matter with user authentication when all I want is to share a session across multiple "browser sessions". The reason is security. Even if it is an internal company application. Do you think your managers would want to know that anyone in the company could masquerade their sessions.
Technically, this should not be possible. The server identifies clients by setting a cookie on them, and browsers do not share their cookies (they only share them between tabs, that's why you see that different tabs are treated as the same client). You could try identifying by IP address, but then all the clients behind a proxy would erroneoulsy be identified as the same client.Any other way of uniquely identifying a client would involve getting information from the machine (something like the MAC address, for instance) and for security reasons browsers are not allowed to do this.
Hi, it's my first time with this software, I installed Voicemeter Banana and VB Cable, I'd like to record with OBS a show from a browser page and in the meantime watch another video for example on youtube or something else from another browser page (I think I should use two different browser, right?)
For example when I look under recent logins on my gmail account or other websites it shows exact OS that I am using and exact Browser. Is there a way to change what Information I am sharing with website without any browser extensions or software on Mac OS?
Yes you can. Here's an overview how to change the user agent specification (which tells the website which browser you are using) on the different browsers (Chrome, Safari, Firefox): look here. Depending on which browser you want to apply it to, just look for an up to date description for the current version. Like this permanent one for Firefox.
I'm now engaged in some work where I need to collaborate with others using the full suite of Gmail, Drive and so on and I have decided to (kind of) sandbox all my Google activity in the Chrome browser, which allows me to keep Safari (kind of) clean.
I thought about using a Key Modifier when clicking a link, though I couldn't work something out to get that to work (While Mail AND ctrl) and then I wondered if KM could change the Default browser for a moment before changing it back to Safari.
The above looks terribly complex to me; I just want a hotkey, a macro, batchfile - whatever works - to QUICKLY change default browsers between Firefox and Edge. Which part of the above is relevant to my aim ?
Small utility to launch a different browser depending on the domain of the url being launched. - GitHub - DanTup/BrowserSelector: Small utility to launch a different browser depending on the domain...
Then there is a possibility to run a sketch in browser (from p5 editor). The browser in my case is chrome. Sketch runs fine, even without slowing down. But as code got longer I noticed that it doesnt always run inside browser even if it works in editor. For example I had to put if statement inside another if statement instead of checking all conditions inside one if statement.
Another possibility is to run a sketch by launching index.html file. Here again I get different results. For example sounds do not want to get pre-loaded. I dont know, maybe it would get solved by properly hosting it somewhere instead running it like that. But this is not biggest issue (I just commented out all the sounds in the code). Even without sounds it gives different results in different browsers:
So this is my story. And the question is: are there any guidelines, what should be avoided and what must be done, to make a code good for all browsers? Or maybe there is a possibility to export a sketch in some kind of exe file that could be sent to other people and I would be sure that it will run on their machines exactly the same as on mine?
Interesting question - you'd have to look into the possibilities with individual browsers. In theory you can create any shortcut in Evernote that you can create on your desktop so if you can use "...firefox.exe + note address (or URL)" to load Firefox and a specific page, you can attach that to a note and call it from there as a shortcut. It might take a while for the note to load, because it has to wait for the browser to start first.
For now, what I've done is add a small utility which switches the default browser from within Windows. I set it to Opera and do the work there (from links in Evernote). Then switch to Chrome and open other links, etc.
Each Evernote webclipper *knows* which browser it is clipping from, so I would like a setting that is says "open links in same browser that clipped this" when I click on the link(s) in that note. Thus, links clipped from Chrome open in Chrome, links clipped from Firefox open in Firefox, etc. This setting can be turned off, and the source clipper detail information is not lost. That is, after turning the setting back on, all links are back to be opened by the browser that clipped them. If the setting is turned off, then the enhancements in Feature Request #2 take over.
If setting #1 is not set, then I'd like Evernote to have a global setting that says "open all links in ..." with a drop down showing all installed browsers. On my machines, this dropdown would look like:
When right clicking a link, I see a short menu of two entries: "Edit" and "Remove". Because of Feature Request #2, this context menu should now include the list of all installed browsers, so that the link could be opened in any one of them. This feature would be a way to bypass whatever value #1 and #2 is set to; this right-click context menu effectively overrides those settings and executes a one-time open in the selected browser. KeyPass has this feature.
Here is why I want those settings: Some applications don't work well with anything but IE (due to ASP or some MS specific dependency). TradeStation is a windows based charting and trading program that opens supplies links to help, alerts, messages, pop-up notifications, etc that are IE specific, so when I click on that link and Firefox is my default browser, the important alert is not readable. (Ok, so folks at TradeStation should fix this dependency, but they won't, and may never, the MS infrastructure is simply too great, I assume.) So, I make IE my default and TS is happy. But I surf exclusively with FF (and sometimes Chrome). I just deal with it. But I would LOOOOVE if Evernote had its own idea of a default browser so that I could engage Evernote exclusively with Firefox.
It's an interesting possibility I guess, but it's a huge complication that probably 95% of users wouldn't understand or use and therefore just borders on bloat. I have some websites that 'demand' IE - but can be fooled by a Firefox add-in, so I tend to use just the one browser all the time. Two tabs (IME) burning less memory than having two separate apps running. The only time when I run two browsers is if something refuses to load in the one, I'll open different software to see if it's just me having that problem with one browser.
I was wondering if you can disable EVERNOTE from opening after clipping a note from Internet Explorer or any other browser. Most often I add tags and put it in the notebook I want from the Browser extension, thus eliminating the need to "open after clipping". I would love to be able to change that default to "do not open after clipping".
I do not see a place to set that but, for me, 85-95% of the time I do not want it to open after clipping. BTW; Love the new improvements for clipping but we sure need a way to set default on "opening after clipping".
Thanks,
Pioneer52
Hi. You don't have to 'like' your own post to get any priority around here. It is helpful to know what OS and browser you're using for clipping, and whether it's Evernote's Clipper or Clearly. Either way if you check the Options for your clipper (you may have to do that in the browser add-in page) you may be able to avoid a note window opening up. If you're complaining about the application itself opening, you should be able to minimise it and not see it again until you shut down. The only other answer would be to use the web version and make sure your clips are saved online.
My question is, is it necessary to test the same browser on different operating systems. For example, is it necessary to test a site on Internet explorer version 11 running on Windows 7 as well as Windows 8?
Actually rendering elements in a webpage/application and the webpage/application itself depends a lot on the environment it is being accessed. The environment includes, the OS, Browser, any plugins in the browser, the device screen size, the interface mode of the device, the technology you used to create the webpage/application and more.
First I would make sure that my current key features work on each version of Windows and the same browser. Now if are no difference I think I can decide that the risk of issues between different operating versions are unlikely, because if there where differences I would found them by now. With a bit of luck you now have only one Windows version to test.
Also research possible difference between the operating systems that might give issues. Examples could be different default fonts and font-sizes. Border sizes of windows that could lead to small parts to be cut off the page.
Upgrading to Windows 10 from Windows 7 improved this greatly (not just in browsers), and this was in Chrome, so not browser dependent at all, but instead the way the underlying OS handled the high DPI.
When it comes to web browsers, the market has several offerings. A few decades back, IE (Internet Explorer) was the only option people had. But as different browsers started to emerge, people quickly adopted them and left IE. In fact, IE was so slow that many people made memes on it.
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