In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Darin Fisher 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> That element of the UA string indicates the security level supported by 
> the browser.  It comes from the pref: general.useragent.security, where 
> 'N' is the default value (#define'd as UA_APPSECURITY_FALLBACK  in 
> nsHTTPHandler.cpp).

Does that mean that the Mac build used to generate these user-agent
strings did not have PSM installed, and the others did? Or that
there is a bug detecting PSM on the Mac when generating the 
user-agent?

Simon

> Simon Fraser wrote:
> 
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Tom Everingham 
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 
> >> WinNT4.0 build 2001-01-30-11-Mtrunk
> >> 
> >> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; WinNT4.0; en-US; m18) Gecko/20010130 
> >> Netscape6/6.5
> > 
> >> Mac OS9 build 2001-01-30-10-Mtrunk
> >> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; N; PPC; en-US; m18) Gecko/20010130 
> >> Netscape6/6.5
> > 
> > 
> > What does the "U;" and "N;" in the user-agent signify?
> > 
> > Simon

-- 
          Simon Fraser   Entomologist
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://people.netscape.com/sfraser/

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