Cisco webex, a verynice experience
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This is the photo shoot i made during the webinar. That's all i have because that all i could see from where i was :)
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Nobody likes Opera. Even though it is not hard, no one supports Opera.
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Did you refer to the null page?
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cisco can make a very nice appliance...
As someone who worked for a company that made software for resale by Cisco under the Cisco label, it is likely that a lot of software that Cisco sells is actually written by third-party shops. They do have a pretty rigourous QA process, but I'm willing to bet that bugs in Cisco software is not their fault.
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@DrPepper said:
cisco can make a very nice appliance...
I thought the purpose of Cisco was to allow people to have whole alphabets of letters after their names. To pick a result at random from LinkedIn:
CCVP, CCDP, CCNP, CCSP, CCIP, CCNP Security, CCNA, CCDA, CCNAV, CS-CAWLANFS, CS-CAWLANDS, CS-CUDS, CS-CUSS, CS-CIPCCES, CS-CFWS, CS-CIPSS, CNACS, CS-CISecS, CIOSSS, CS-CFEDS, CS-CRMCS
That guy is clearly slacking however; I know someone with 'CCNA-Wireless' proudly displayed in their email sig.
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@OhNoDevelopment said:
Nobody likes Opera. Even though it is not hard, no one supports Opera.
Considering their webex system is juste a plain non working java applet. I consider they did extra work to ensure it would not work in opera :)
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@OhNoDevelopment said:
-webkit-Nobody likes Opera. Even -webkit-though it is not -webkit-hard, no one -webkit-supports Opera.
-moz-Nobody likes Opera. Even -moz-though it is not -moz-hard, no one -moz-supports Opera.-webkit-ftfy.
-moz-ftfy.
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-o-rly?
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Did you try right click -> site preferences -> network -> mask as Firefox? Most of the time this solves all problems for me.
In particular Google's reverse image search blocked Opera for a long time, despite it working 100% flawlessly after changing the user agent.
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@LoremIpsumDolorSitAmet said:
-o-rly?
YMMD!
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@OhNoDevelopment said:
Nobody likes Opera. Even though it is not hard, no one supports Opera.
As a user, I love opera, as a developer, I sometimes hate it. Opera has some pretty nasty bugs and no public bug tracker you could search for workarounds. The last time I tried to create a nice CSS-only flyout menu, I had to hide the CSS from Opera. And I was not using any experimental CSS3 stuff, only CSS 2.1 pseudo elements (to prevent the menu from closing too easily).