![]() The files Microsoft Support gave me were named Office 365 Business 2016 which appears to correspond. I've confirmed that O365BusinessRetail is one of the supported Product IDs for the ODT and that it is the appropriate ID for my subscription. I have the ODT setup.exe file in C:\odt\Office and a Configuration.xml file with the appropriate settings, for example: Microsoft Support have supplied me with the 1.06GB installation package, which I have downloaded and placed in a directory C:\odt\Office so that the paths to the data files look like this: C:\odt\Office\Data\.1029\ and C:\odt\Office\Data\.1029\ iCab is the 3rd-party app that I use most often on my iOS devices, and it continues to be improved at a much faster rate than Safari.I'm trying to install Office 2016 (business subscription) using the Office Deployment Tool 2016 (ODT) from a pre-downloaded install package. ![]() To me, spending two bucks for a much better browser is a complete bargain. To some people, spending two bucks on a browser when Safari is free sounds like wasting money. ![]() If you don't know what x-callback-url is, don't worry about it, but if you do know what it is, you'll be glad to know iCab supports it. ICab Mobile also supports x-callback-url which helps iCab interact with other iOS applications. If I want to open a page from Safari in iCab, I can do one of two things: I can tap on the URL and change the " or " to "web://" or "webs://" - which opens the current page in iCab - or I can install the Open in iCab bookmark. In practice that doesn't bother me too much, because Safari is a very good mobile browser. The only downside to using iCab is that Apple does not allow any browser except Safari to be set as the default browser, so any web links clicked in other applications like Mail will continue to open in Safari. Images can be saved from websites directly to Dropbox. You can even upload those files to Dropbox. You can download files right to iCab, and then either store them in iCab or open them in other apps. It lets you change the Browser ID (User Agent) which can be handy for sites that restrict access to certain kinds of browsers or automatically redirect mobile browsers to a stripped-down version of the site. ICab sync bookmarks, filters, search engines, and/or settings using iCloud. In my opinion, iCab is also better at everything else you use a browser for. Once password protected, it's possible to enable a 'Guest Mode' to let someone use iCab but still keep your information protected. You can also set it to automatically delete history, cookies, databases, and/or local storage when quitting the app.Īs if that wasn't enough, you can password protect the entire application, so anyone else who launches the app is unable to see your bookmarks, history, or anything else. ICab offers Private Browsing, of course, but it also offers many more privacy controls than Safari, such as the ability to delete history, cookies, saved form data, HTTP Auth credentials, databases, and local storage. I reviewed iCab last year, but let me focus on some of iCab's privacy features here. ![]() ICab Mobile (AKA iCab) is a US$1.99 app that continues to be my browser of choice on my iPad and iPhone. ICab Mobile: Everything Safari does, and much more You can't do that with Safari, but you can do it with iCab. ![]() Private Browsing is great for short web browsing sessions, but what if you want to be able to keep your history and cookies and bookmarks but not allow anyone who uses your iPhone or iPad to be able to access them? Mobile Safari now has a 'Private Browsing' option to prevent history items, searches, cookies, and form data from being stored. By subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy. ![]()
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