Turns out you're right. I was curious, so I tried several object methods with all kinds of params, and all they do is play the sound and show controls below a blank player screen.
In case anyone else wants to give it a try, this is how I was identified in CS 1.6 on Win7 x64:
Code:
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; Trident/5.0; SLCC2; .NET CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.5.30729; .NET CLR 3.0.30729; Media Center PC 6.0; .NET4.0C; .NET4.0E; .NET CLR 1.1.4322)
browscap.ini:
Code:
browser_name_regex:§^mozilla/4\.0 \(compatible; msie 7\.0.*; .*windows nt 6\.1.*\).*$§
browser_name_pattern:Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0*; *Windows NT 6.1*)*
parent:IE 7.0
platform:Win7
platform_version:6.1
platform_description:Windows 7
comment:IE 7.0
browser:IE
version:7.0
majorver:7
minorver:0
win32:1
frames:1
iframes:1
tables:1
cookies:1
backgroundsounds:1
javascript:1
vbscript:1
javaapplets:1
activexcontrols:1
cssversion:2
device_name:PC
device_maker:Various
alpha:
beta:
win16:
win64:
ismobiledevice:
issyndicationreader:
crawler:
aolversion:0
renderingengine_name:unknown
renderingengine_version:unknown
renderingengine_description:unknown
objects:
HTML Code:
<object classid="CLSID:6BF52A52-394A-11d3-B153-00C04F79FAA6" id="player" width="320" height="240">
<param name="url" value="http://lol.com/video_file.wmv" />
<param name="src" value="http://lol.com/video_file.wmv" />
<param name="showcontrols" value="true" />
<param name="autostart" value="true" />
</object>
HTML Code:
<object type="video/x-ms-wmv" data="http://lol.com/video_file.wmv" width="320" height="240">
<param name="url" value="http://lol.com/video_file.wmv" />
<param name="src" value="http://lol.com/video_file.wmv" />
<param name="autostart" value="true" />
<param name="controller" value="true" />
</object>
The good news is that it would look like shit anyway.
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