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hunankl132
03-19-2011, 09:29 PM
As well as the a great deal more prominent function we’ve achieved to enable international scenarios (like incorporating assistance for International Domain Names),office Professional 2010 (http://www.office2010-key.ca/), Internet Explorer 7 updates the on hand values for that Accept-Language header. Accept-Language is an HTTP header sent for the server by the browser to indicate the user’s language and locale. As an example, the Accept-Language header sent by the browser of a native French speaker in France and fluent in German might be: Accept-Language: fr-FR,de-DE;q=0.5 A server, upon receiving such a header, should return French content if readily available, or German content if French content is not on hand. By default, the Accept-Language header is calculated based mostly about the Windows default locale,microsoft office 2007 Professional Plus product key (http://www.office2007-key.ca/), and it can be set on the “Customize your settings” page shown after IE7 is first installed. Users may specify added languages using the World-wide-web Control Panel. To see the list of available languagelocales, click the Tools button, then click Word wide web Options. About the General tab, click the Languages button to see the Language Preference dialog. (The languages chosen here are also used to determine which character sets should be displayed natively in the address bar.) In IE6, most of the choices in the Language Preference list specified a locale-neutral two letter code. For instance fr was sent for French (France), and ja sent for Japanese. Longer codes were only used when a language is commonly spoken in another country or locale-- for instance fr-CA was accessible for French-speaking Canadians. For Web Explorer 7, a change was made such that World wide web Explorer will send the full languagelocale pair for each locale. IE7 will send fr-FR for French (France) and de-DE for German (Germany). This change enables web servers to far more easily target content for a specific language and locale. If a given server is only interested in the user’s language and not the locale, it can ignore the locale portion by simply truncating the code at the first dash. We hope this small change will guidance website developers on their quest to build ever-smarter web site applications. Eric LawrenceProgram Manager Edit: replacing Accept-Language=fr-FR,Windows 7 Starter (http://www.windows7-key.org/),de-DE;q=0.5 with Accept-Language: fr-FR,microsoft office Professional 2007 keygen (http://www.office-2007-key.de/),de-DE;q=0.5BTW, IE7 in vista and obiouslly in Windows XP is not displaying perfectly the new design of download.com, I saw it comings from miles away. Maybe you guys didn't all, because of your lack of Vision.
And that negative behavior of you has what to do with this post about http-headers?
The guys of the development-team of IE seven.0 are the wonderful guys! There on our side (in my case: of webdeveloping and following W3C-standards). Oké,office pro plus 2010 x86 (http://www.office2010-key.ca/), I admit, that wasn't always the case in the past, and yes, they still are miles behind other standards-compilant browsers (as FF).
BUT they did have show a commitmet, they have promissed some things (not unreleastic things, it would be impossible to expect that they correct all the bugs while they have finished for 6 years on their browserengine) and maked it true.
What do we gain from fighting this guys, from bickering them off in every topic because there boses (Billy Gates) don't think (thought) that upgrading a browser for 6 years is necessary? Nothing.
We should be happy about the progresses that have been made, instead of staying negative. Always look at the bright side of life...
Sur, blaim MS... but don't blaim the IE team. They're on our side.
And besides... you can't expect the IE team that THEY fix alle the x.000.000.000.000 websites around the the web, don't you? Still the responsiblity for your webdesigner.
And BTW... great idee of the language-headers with seperating of the full language and locale var.