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Microsoft wants you to use Firefox.


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#1 DarkShadow

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Posted 27 March 2007 - 11:51 AM

Just a warning for you idiots who can't read, this isn't me, its a cut / paste from the INQ

AFTER MIGRATING TO 64-bit Vista on my DSDC Opteron workstation, yours truly found himself somewhere between heaven and a hot place. First of all, most of the applications I use are working better than they did on XP64. And game compatibility hasn't been an issue at all, although, admittedly, WoW is the only game installed on the machine.

But, the biggest incompatibility issue between Vista and the normal world I found was hiding in a very unusual place - Microsoft's own developer network. If you use Internet Exploder 7 (either 32- or 64-bit version), MSDN will gladly inform you that you are using an incompatible operating system or that the web-site you are trying to visit is not secure.

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What the heck...?

Even worse, using Microsoft File Transfer Manager, utility to download CD/DVD images of MSFT apps - isn't possible since "Vista�s enhanced security prevents user from downloading files", so you have to either do a work-around, as Microsoft advises you, or start looking for another web-browser.

But let's say that I do not want to use Fireferret or Opera and decide to become Microsoft's poster-child and listen to its work-around. What happened was a constant loop of downloading new versions of File Transfer Manager and not being able to get the work-around to work. And I do not consider myself an idiot. (Cough! News Ed.)

So, I did what any logical person would do: Install Fireferret on Vista and forget that IE exists at all. Not a shiny start for a browser that copies Fireferret's user-interface.

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Oh my, MSDN and Microsoft's FTM works with no issues in Vista... courtesy of a foxy little app


Mr. Gates, Mr. Ozzie, Mr. Ballmer - next time around, stop being politically correct and just tell people to use Firefox; it will work. Customers pay thousands of dollars a year for a MSDN site licence, only in this instance to get a politically-correct, but useless Help feature. �

Sauce: INQ



This is very funny, Goodjob microshaft, as usual.
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#2 Chris82

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Posted 27 March 2007 - 02:05 PM

Microsoft has long wanted Firefox to succeed.

After all, they sent them a (non-poision) cake on the release of Firefox 2.

MS doesn't know how to code for sh*t.
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#3 Novahawk

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Posted 27 March 2007 - 02:09 PM

If you go to that website that they have typed in: msdn2.microsoft.com/subscriptions/manage then firefox also tells you that the security certificate is from an unknown source, which is what ie is saying...
Firefox is definitely the way to go, but i dont get what they're talking about ie blocking the msdn site, firefox does the same thing :wtf:

Edited by Novahawk, 27 March 2007 - 02:10 PM.

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#4 DarkShadow

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Posted 27 March 2007 - 02:14 PM

MSDN is a subscription based service where you gotta pay for a license ...
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#5 Novahawk

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Posted 27 March 2007 - 02:18 PM

Yeah i know, but i tried going to that site, and it told me that the security certificate is from an unknown source, i said allow it for the session and it took me to the login page...
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#6 XxInColdBloodxX

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Posted 27 March 2007 - 03:32 PM

After all, they sent them a (non-poision) cake on the release of Firefox 2.

MS doesn't know how to code for sh*t.

Apparently they don't know how to make cakes ether. They could have made it blue and shit...
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