![]() To give you an example, the current user-agents for Chrome, Firefox and Edge are: It’s sent by the browser to the server through a HTTP header, and can be used for things like serving a mobile version of a site if the request is coming from a smartphone. To briefly summarise, a browser’s user-agent is a string (line of text) that helps identify which browser is being used, what version it is and what operating system is being used. ![]() ![]() Read on to find out why people are anticipating something akin to the Y2k bug all over again. While this sounds like a cause for celebration, it could result in endless headaches for a small number of websites, due to the bugs and compatibility issues that come with a triple-digit user agent string. ![]() Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox and Microsoft Edge are rapidly closing in on a big milestone: version 100. ![]()
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