System Requirements
The Proxomitron was originally developed on a Pentium 120, and
will work fine on such a system depending on your connection speed and
the number and types of filters you use. Faster connections (like DSL
and Cable) may require more CPU horsepower to filter. It should also
work fine on Win 95,98,ME,NT,2000, and XP. However my ability to test
on all platforms is limited. Please inform me if you do have any troubles here.
Upgrading from a previous versions
If you don't want to keep the previous version around, it's safe
to simply copy the new files over top of the old (be sure to include the
subfolders) . However first make backup copies or rename any config files you changed! Otherwise
they'll be overwritten by the newer versions. To keep your changes
either copy the config files somewhere else or simply change them from
their original names (as in default.cfg to MyDefault.cfg
). This only applies to the config files included in the original
distribution; any config files you named yourself will be fine.
Installation and Eradication
None needed really. Well, at least not in the normal sense...
Unlike many Windows programs which seem to insinuate their way into your system like some parasitic organism, the Proxomitron...
- copies no files to any folders outside its own,
- makes no changes to your system registry,
- and modifies no .ini files.
For the plain version just unzip the files wherever you wish. To uninstall just delete the folder containing the Proxomitron program. No further trace of it will be left anywhere else on your system. Because of this it's also safe to move the program folder from one place to another without having to "re-install."
Setting your web browser to use the Proxomitron
After "Installation" you must configure your
web browser to use the program. This involves setting the browser's
proxy option. Although it varies from browser to browser, most browsers
have this option somewhere.
For Netscape: Run Netscape and go to the "Edit" menu. Select "Preferences > advanced > proxies". Click "Manual proxy configuration" then "View". Next under HTTP enter "localhost" and for port enter "8080". Leave the other proxy entries (FTP, Gopher, etc.) alone.
For Internet Explorer 5.x: Well, it seems with every version Microsoft has to bury this a little deeper (are they trying to hide it? ;-).
Anyway, here's the deal...
0 comments:
Post a Comment