I noticed lately a few listeners on my Vorbis stream using a player called: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322) I know Mozilla is a browser. Does it have a Vorbis decoder built-in or what's the story. Anyone? Regards, Ross Levis. http://www.stationplaylist.com -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Anti-Virus. Version: 7.0.300 / Virus Database: 265.6.11 - Release Date: 12/01/2005
On Thu, Jan 13, 2005 at 10:43:55PM +1300, Ross Levis wrote:> I noticed lately a few listeners on my Vorbis stream using a player called: > Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322) > > I know Mozilla is a browser. Does it have a Vorbis decoder built-in or > what's the story. Anyone?Not as far as I know. This more than likely means that someone was using Mozilla to record the stream. Icecast uses standard HTTP, so any web-based client can grab a copy of the stream for archive/etc. Are you linking to the .m3u's or to the .ogg streams directly? -- Diversity is the Fuel of Evolution, Conformity it's Starvation. Be Radical. Be New. Be Different. Feed Evolution with Everything You Are. "The question is no longer between violence and non-violence; It is between non-violence and non-existence." - Martin Luther King, Jr
Ross Levis wrote:> I noticed lately a few listeners on my Vorbis stream using a player called: > Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322)This is Internet Explorer 6.0 Geoff. -- Geoff Shang <geoff@hitsandpieces.net> Phone: +61-418-96-5590 MSN: geoff@acbradio.org Make sure your E-mail can be read by everyone! http://www.betips.net/etc/evilmail.html Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments. See http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html
Geoff Shang wrote:> Ross Levis wrote: > >> I noticed lately a few listeners on my Vorbis stream using a player >> called: >> Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322) > > > This is Internet Explorer 6.0 > > Geoff.And is quite possibly a plugin player, like quicktime, for example. Stephen Liveice Project http://liveice.sf.net