Reviews for User-Agent Switcher and Manager
User-Agent Switcher and Manager by Ray
58 reviews
- by Firefox user 14379205, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 14879905, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by b28, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Bonnie, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Allobe, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 14760314, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5Can you spoof UserAgent from header ?
Check on https://browserspy.dk/useragent.php
Not working on first visit. - by Haroona, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Kholdfyre, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by 吴晓欢, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 15380577, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by !.Sir. Skadholm.!, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 14892178, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 15273654, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 14506442, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5Just some constructive criticism: The headlined feature of UA randomization is not explained well and could be implemented better. Having additional functionality that is not streamlined is always better than not having it at all, so I can't complain much :)
- by Firefox user 15179287, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by NotCompatible, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5Über
navigator.oscpu
lässt sich trotzdem die echt benutzte Windows-Version abfragen. - by Firefox user 15102612, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Liakat, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Alex Havel, 3 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by ron47ron1, 4 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 13522774, 4 years agoRated 4 out of 5This appears to be an effective agent switcher, I like it but there's just one thing, I can't set the screen resolution to something different than what my actual screen resolution is. If you could add in an option for spoofing the screen resolution this would be a 5/5 add-on :-)
- by jacko9000, 4 years agoRated 4 out of 5Works well with Firefox Nightly v60.0a1 on Android v6.0.1. Would be vastly improved if regular expressions (extended form) could be used to match against entire URLs. Currently, only the absolute string of the top-level hostname can be checked. But with regular expressions, it would, for example, be possible to match "^[fhttps]*\:\/\/www\.google\.co(m|\.[^\/]*)\/imgres\?" against URLs, in order to specify the user agent for displaying an image returned from a Google image search. Although this is a seemingly-specific example, with extended regular expression matching, anything would be possible, as they provide maximum URL-matching flexibility.