View Single Post
  #3  
Old May 6th 15, 01:21 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.help_and_support,alt.windows7.general
Snuffy \Hub Cap\ McKinney
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 37
Default Browser for Older OS and Older Users

"VanguardLH" wrote in message ...
Snuffy McKinney wrote:

Sorry, I know this is for XP -- can't find any other groups on older
OS's.


microsoft.public.win2000.general
alt.os.windows2000

Anyone recommend a browser for Win 2000 more functional than IE6 or
Firefox 12.


Google Chrome
https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/95346?hl=en
Only goes back to Windows XP, and only until the end of this year when
Google will discard support for Windows XP. I suspect when Google drops
Windows XP that other web browsers will, too.

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb...s-windows-2000
Yep, Mozilla dropped support for Windows 2000 so all you can use are
their really old versions. Firefox 12 is about 2-1/2 years old. Of
course, Windows 2000 is over 15 years old with mainstream support dead
10 years ago and extended support dead 5 years ago.

As to finding web browsers that claim they still support Windows 2000:

http://www.seamonkey-project.org/doc...m-requirements
That says Seamonkey still supports Windows 2000.

http://www.softpedia.com/get/Interne...axthon-3.shtml
Could not find system requirements for Maxthon Cloud or even their older
versions at the Maxthon site other than supports [all] versions of
Windows (which is not true since 9x-based versions of Windows are not
included). There is a wiki for Maxthon but it has not been updated for
6 years. The following download site says Windows 2000 is supported:
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Interne...axthon-3.shtml.

http://www.avantbrowser.com/support.aspx#systemreq
Says it supports all the way back to Windows NT (probably means NT 4).

Just because web browsers support Windows 2000 doesn't mean sites will
accept connections from those web browsers. Rather than test a web
browsing client for its capabilities, many sites still use the User
Agent string sent by the web browser to determine if the site will work
with that web browser. Sites will often list only a certain range of
web browsers and their versions by looking at the UA string sent by the
client. If the client's UA string isn't in their list, they may limit
or restrict access to their site. I don't know what UA string is sent
by Maxthon or Avant Browser. Those clients might have their own UA
string or they might send a UA string representing an old version of IE
or Firefox (or for whichever rendering engine is in use at the time).
There are add-ons (for some web browsers) that lets you send a different
UA string to lie to sites that use the UA string to determine if they
allow your web browser to [fully] use their site; however, lying about
which web browser connected to them will not magically create functions
that are missing in your client that a site may rely upon.


Thanks VLH!! Very much appreciated. This will be a stopgap measure to keep their computer going unitl I can find the simplest way to get them upgraded with only non-technical people around to help. "Put plug A into slot B", etc... This is actually the way computers should work for everyone.

Especially as times goes on, average folks are getting less and less technically savvy. In the old timey days when folks lived on farms, they could do everything themselves. Now if someone pulls a sock into the vacuum cleaner it goes to the repair shop.


Ads