![]() I think MS and Adobe need to face facts, with browser Javascript getting exceedingly fast in newer browsers thanks to JIT (Chrome, Firefox 3.5, Safari 4) and the new features of HTMLĥ the days of plugins to view content are dying out. Thankfully with HTML 5 and the tag we'll soon be rid of flash too. So regardless of site the annoying silverlightĪny site that is dependant on a plugin to be usable is a waste of time in my book. Note the asterisk (*), this is a wildcard that declares everything before silverlight.js as anything. click on default browser on the left pane. go to settings of edge > click on three dots on right corner on the top. Microsoft Silverlight is a powerful platform for creating rich media. install silver light ( you need a downloaded file, coz its not available now for download) 2. Microsoft Silverlight 3 which does not appear to be installed on your computer. You will now be prompted for the window below, simply select custom and enter "*silverlight.js" (excluding commas). to run silver light application in Win 11 Edge, 1. The page can be accessed in Internet Explorer mode by clicking the button. Search for "silverlight.js" or just "silverlight" you eventually should see that annoying little script. To install Silverlight in Microsoft Edge Chromium, follow these steps. If you installed Silverlight in the past and wish to use the standard Info. Once loaded click on the adblock button, it should open the "Blockable items on current page" list as shown below. Info Exchange uses an HTML5 uploader by default. On Firefox I recommend Adblock Plus, go to a silverlight prompt annoying website such as I thinkĪvant might have this capability, I haven't used it since pre-1.0 Firefox though) (if you insist on using IE I believe there are IE based browsers that have adblocking capability. You'll need a browser that has a user configurable adblock mechanism either inbuilt or via a third party. So as such I've made a user here to help people get rid of this This forum posting is near the top on most search engines (well, the only important one: Google) for results relating to the annoying silverlight prompt. ![]() How silly is this, really? Bravo Microsoft, once again for driving us away. The only solution I have found on the internet so far is to install Firefox with an ad-blocking plugin to make this go away. Not install Microsoft's plugins, clearly Microsoft does not respect this right. We have the right to run higher privacy/security settings and Microsoft, as always, is assuming people have medium to low privacy/security settings and that they will easily cave in and install their Silverlight plugin and accept their license agreement. Silverlight is a cross-browser, cross-platform plug-in for delivering the next generation of Microsoft. It's getting so annoying we are telling people and are ourselves trying to avoid all Microsoft web sites now. It's pure and simple in our face harassment on the part of Microsoft. Look, I just went to right now, this is what we're confronted with. On the right, look for Silverlight Plug-In, and click the Disable button next to it. This one does (), most tech and dev Microsoft sites do now, heck, even the They have gone that far, trust me, we are confronted with it.
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