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For example, you will notice that the IP address for this comment is my home IP, but I am sitting at my desk at work right now.
How do you use the ip from home? Tunnel? Remote desktop? I use RD all the time.
P.S. - If you check the IP on this comment, you will see that I am in Amsterdam right now.
I work in a bank with 10.000 users - all of them using IE to go onto the net. This is because :
- several inhouse apps were designed only with IE in mind (a big mistake if you ask me)
- it's more integrated with windows, can be configured remotely via a proxy.pac
- they can re-use your network login from your pc to authenticate you to the proxy (with IE this is usually done via NTLM authentication), so you only have to type your pasword once when you login, and it is then re-used.
- it's easier to support one browser instead of 5 different ones.
Probably, if this didn't happen before, they also want you to pass via the proxy they setup - this can substantially lower data throughput on the line as the proxies cache data from websites that are visited by more than one person. Also, you can pipe all the data through an antivirus/antispyware scanner for webpages. This also protects you better.
However, you should not worry overmuch. Unless you have particularly vicious sysadmins (which happens) you can usually find out the proxy settings set in IE and plug those into Firefox. Recent versions of Firefox all can do NTLM authentication just fine. You just have to enter your network id and password once you go to the internet.
We also have IE as a standard, and the only thing I use it for is the corporate intranet - anything else is Firefox.