Related
Hi All,
I was told by an AT&T guy that you could change the opera config file to make opera on the Fuze act a fully functional browser. The problem I am having is the opera will take to me to the mobile version of websites and I don't want that. I have tried changing the user agent to 2 and 3, but that didn't correct the problem. Does anyone know what has to be changed to make this work?
thanks
billf.
A couple of other things to do in the opera:config page. First, you want to change the "Custom User-Agent" in "user prefs" to "Mozilla/4.0(compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 6.0;en)" (although I've also heard that just deleting that string works, too, but I haven't tried it).
The other thing is to delete the HTTP and HTTPS server names in the "Proxy" section.
These changes will get you to the normal version of most sites (although there are some sites that still redirect to wap/mobile versions -- I don't use any of these on a regular basis, but nba.com is one such).
You can upgrade to build 2745
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=442252&highlight=opera+2745&page=15
I followed all of the tips and some of the sites still wouldn't go, no matter what changes I made. I followed owziee's directions in the link above exactly and upgraded to the 2745 build that herg posted in that same thread. Works perfectly and I can now go to desktop sites. You do have to make the additional changes, can't just run the cab or it doesn't fit vga and zoom properly, but with my low to intermediate skills it wasn't a problem to do.
I can't stand this Opera Mobile. Web pages are constantly changing size on my, and I can't zoom in or out. Is there any way to change the default browser to IE? IE works much better for me.
i didnt like opera at first but its actually way better then PIE. go to the opera settings and there is a button that says "mobile view" uncheck it and all websites are not in mobile view.
also. im sure u know. but for zooming u can run your finger in a circle clockwise or counterclockwise on the button to make it zoom in or out...or u can double tap the touch screen for it to zoom in.
all you gotta do is add to the end of your web address is "index.html". ex. espn.com/index.html
Works perfectly
You have to disable your proxy for your data connection or it will go to the mobile version as well. That is in connection settings. Uncheck the box that says this connection uses a proxy. I was getting all mobile sites until I did that.
waste of time
screw all that programming - just install skyfire and set it as your default browser through itself and if that doesnt work, install total commander and change the internet file - google it and you'll find simple instructions
Hi,
Here's the link to the Opera Mobile thread; have a look at the last 25 or so posts in the thread.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=486502
In a nutshell, stock ROM's receive many post-configuration changes via .PROVXML; this means that the experience of applications are changed by the carrier to suit their requirements.
There are a few adjustments that are required in order to achive the experience you're after ... the link will help you achieve your desired configuration and saves me repeating all the same info here.
I've enhanced my Webserver sample to support reading from the device (where allowed), as well as reading/writing IsolatedStorage
The XAP is located in the Webserver project.
To access the webserver, open the app on your phone (it will disable the idle timer and run behind the lock screen--but WiFi will turn off, so you'll want to be connected via USB or don't let it sleep)
//phone_ip/IsolatedStorage
//phone_ip/Windows
IsolatedStorage is a special case (virtual directory that uses the SDK IsolatedStore APIs), the filesystem is mounted at the root of the webserver. Note that if you navigate to //phone_ip/, you will not see anything, as we are not able to list the contents of the root directory.
I am working to create a real socket library that mimics System.Net/.Sockets, and System.IO for file access. TcpClient and TcpListener are in a mostly functional state already.
Most of the socket and I/O code came from jmorrill. I have pulled code from mono to mimic System.Net.
Perhaps I'll spend some time on the web UI next, maybe a fancy Silverlight uploader. There doesn't seem to be a ton of interest though, so we'll see.
Update ("v2"):
- Authentication
- UI
- Adapter list
- More reliable
nice.. will try it out.
Very nice! Thanks!!
I've updated the sample to one with a UI, Authentication and more reliability.
Looking at your code WP7 looks more and more like a normal windows CE with a secured UI.
Yeah, I think someone with a strong WM background could port code to [native, homebrew] WP7 pretty quickly. Pretty much everything works just fine.... I just wish we could add the System.Net .NET CF assemblies back to the GAC. :/
davux said:
I've enhanced my Webserver sample to support reading from the device (where allowed), as well as reading/writing IsolatedStorage
The XAP is located in the Webserver project.
To access the webserver, open the app on your phone (it will disable the idle timer and run behind the lock screen--but WiFi will turn off, so you'll want to be connected via USB or don't let it sleep)
//phone_ip/IsolatedStorage
//phone_ip/Windows
IsolatedStorage is a special case (virtual directory that uses the SDK IsolatedStore APIs), the filesystem is mounted at the root of the webserver. Note that if you navigate to //phone_ip/, you will not see anything, as we are not able to list the contents of the root directory.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Noob questions: It says "connect to your wifi address below". How? Also, connect the phone or the pc? And navigate via IE mobile?
As I said, noob questions. Thanks for any help.
start ie and type in http://wifi address
I have found on alternateboot.reg
HTML:
; Disable MTPz USB function driver
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Drivers\USB\FunctionDrivers\CompositeFN]
"ClientDriverList"=multi_sz:"Serial_Class"
What is MTPz USB function driver?
ajhvdb said:
start ie and type in http://wifi address
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
... which gives me the ever-popular "cannot find server or DNS address". What am I doing wrong? I assume you meant IE on my phone.
piaqt said:
... which gives me the ever-popular "cannot find server or DNS address". What am I doing wrong? I assume you meant IE on my phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think (might be misreading your question), you'll need to plug your device in to USB (or be prepared to loose the connection), then on your desktop, go to one of the IPs listed (in IE or any other browser).
On the screenshot shown, WiFi is the last one, with "BCMSDDHD1" attached to the label, thought the device name may be different for you. Try one that has "192.168.1." as that'll be the most likely option.
l3v5y said:
I think (might be misreading your question), you'll need to plug your device in to USB (or be prepared to loose the connection), then on your desktop, go to one of the IPs listed (in IE or any other browser).
On the screenshot shown, WiFi is the last one, with "BCMSDDHD1" attached to the label, thought the device name may be different for you. Try one that has "192.168.1." as that'll be the most likely option.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. Next noob question: It asks for a user/password. What do I use and or where do I set it?
piaqt said:
Thanks. Next noob question: It asks for a user/password. What do I use and or where do I set it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know what the default password is, but if you type admin/admin in on the device for user/pass that works fine.
EDIT:
Code:
// In order to secure the device, the default password is a random number, not a static default
So you'll need to change it, unless you can read minds
l3v5y said:
I don't know what the default password is, but if you type admin/admin in on the device for user/pass that works fine.
EDIT:
Code:
// In order to secure the device, the default password is a random number, not a static default
So you'll need to change it, unless you can read minds
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK. admin/admin works. Next nq: I get "Error opening directory:O". Is there a specific path to enter?
piaqt said:
OK. admin/admin works. Next nq: I get "Error opening directory:O". Is there a specific path to enter?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try 192.168.1.XX/Windows and that should work.
l3v5y said:
Try 192.168.1.XX/Windows and that should work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ba-da-bing! We are in business.
this works great! does this work just over USB? I assumed that since I didnt see an SSID advertised that the webserver wasn't broadcasting over WiFi.
A few feature suggestions:
* Make it clearer in the device UI to use the last IP address. I had assumed I would use the SERIAL ON USB IP address
* When browsing files, show a detail view so that you can see date/time modfied, type (optional), size
* when in a subdirectory add an Up ellipsis (...) to more easily walk back up the directory tree.
* be able to filter a directory listing so that you can display just certain file types (ie *.exe)
* Be able to download files
I love it! Its handy to be able to get a file listing that you can copy so that you can capture file listings.
Scratch the suggestion to add downloading files, the filenames are of course URLs which enable http downloads
I found a bug. When you click on a file to download it the href seems to have an issue since the file extension is stripped. You can easily add it during the save but it would be easier to have that done by default. I need to check the syntax but for example for filebrowser.exe the html is:
FileBrowser.exe<br />
This was handy so that it was possible to download an EXE and see what certificate is used for signing.
It looks like if you press Back or Start the webserver shuts down or is tombstoned.
I wonder if anyone has come up with a way to keep an application from being killed.
If that was possible then the webserver could provide active control. In that case if it was running in the background a great feature to add would be a screen capture function.
Nokia Lumia 920
I am having a problem with a mobile version of one website on my Windows Phone: The home page loads and displays correctly, but when you touch a link, a "server or DNS cannot be found" - error is shown. However, after hitting "refresh", the page addressed by the link is displayed fine. This is very annoying, so I reported that behavior to the web master of the site.
The suggested solutions that came in response were two:
- allow cookies all the time (I changed that setting, but it did not fix the issue)
- make sure that java scripting is enabled in the Internet Explorer
While in the regular version of IE you can adjust this setting easily through the respective menu, I couldn't find any option in the Windows Phone system or in the options of IE mobile to adjust java scripting.
Questions:
1. Can these settings be changed at all?
2. What are the java script settings in IE mobile by default?
Many thanks
Joerg
First of all, "JavaScript" - one word - is the language commonly used in websites. Java (which is not scripted, although in old versions it was interpreted much the way scripts are) is occasionally also used on the web, but very rarely.
Windows Phone supports JavaScript, and this support cannot be turned off in the browser to the best of my knowledge. Apps can turn it off within their internal WebView controls, but in IE it is always on.
Possibly a silly suggestion, but have you tried rebooting the phone? After that, my next suggestion would be trying the mobile site in IE10 on the desktop, probably using the Developer Tools to spoof the WP8 IE10 user agent string.
GoodDayToDie said:
First of all, "JavaScript" - one word - is the language commonly used in websites. Java (which is not scripted, although in old versions it was interpreted much the way scripts are) is occasionally also used on the web, but very rarely.
Windows Phone supports JavaScript, and this support cannot be turned off in the browser to the best of my knowledge. Apps can turn it off within their internal WebView controls, but in IE it is always on.
Possibly a silly suggestion, but have you tried rebooting the phone? After that, my next suggestion would be trying the mobile site in IE10 on the desktop, probably using the Developer Tools to spoof the WP8 IE10 user agent string.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I tried rebooting - to no avail. Opening the site in IE10 on the desktop does not work, because it automatically detects the browser and switches to the regular (instead of the mobile) site.
Meanwhile, I have encountered the same issue with more mobile sites: clicking on links causes an error. This error does not occurr when you open the site e.g. in Safari on an Ipad.
... probably using the Developer Tools to spoof the WP8 IE10 user agent string
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I take it you're not overly familiar with how web browsers (and servers) work. I can try figuring out what the problem is if you let us know what the problematic site is, though.
Hello guys ... I dont know if this is the place to post my problem but its the only one that is close to what I have as an issue... So .. I have a problem with some active buttons in some sites, when I log in the site there are little active buttons on the top of the page ( account, community, forum, etc. ) so when I try to click on those buttons the phone ( lumia 920 ) just selects the text and gives me the option to copy it. I have few android devices and there is no such issue with them, I dont know if this is connected with the java script or flash or what ever ... I just need some help if there is a fix for this. THX in advance and have a happy new year :good::good::good:
If possible, tap off the text but still on the button (zoom in if you need to). You could also try tapping more quickly, or alternatively tap-and-hold and see if it offers you the context menu for links.
The hello world from https://github.com/pjjanak/chromecast-hello-world was good, I was wondering if anyone know of any similar thing for video. I am trying to understand Fling (the receiver HTML part, I sort of get). However his Java and the Ramp protocol is a bit beyond me in the Sender portion. Anyone know of any simple HTML sender/reciever app that I could take a look at?
I realized that it is a lot to ask, but if anyone could help me I would appreciate it. I just want to learn on how to send a simple URL of video to the chromecast, no server hosting, no transcoding. Simple so my little brain could understand and learn.
I am getting my WhiteList, so I am looking for the official way.
Once your device is whitelisted, you can make use of your AppID in the receiver and sender (also make sure to note the namespace you give your project/app).
For the receiver, have a look at this example provided by google: https://github.com/googlecast/cast-android-sample/blob/master/receiver/receiver.html
This is a basic media player handler. This will suffice for what you've requested.
You will need to replace the sections 'YOUR_APP_ID_HERE', and [cast.receiver.RemoteMedia.NAMESPACE] with your AppID and Namespace. Otherwise, it is ready to use "as-is".
The sender is a completely different story.
You mention you want to have an HTML sender (as apposed to an android app or ios app as the sender). This will require a hosted scenario (which, with a little configuration, you can make your local PC be the HTML host - AKA local web server software to HOST the html/js/css. Or if you already have a host for your receiver, you may place these sender items on it as well).
I'll continue this post in a little while. Have to continue working my "real job" then come back to this lol. Sorry.
Thank you, Unholyfire, looking forward to your next post. And thank you for your help on the other post as well. I now have somewhere to host my file online. Just waiting on Google. And yep Sender is harder. I played around with the original sender from google (which doesn't work now), I used mongoose and whitelisted Localhost already so I am familiar with the hosting concept.
Unholyfire said:
Once your device is whitelisted, you can make use of your AppID in the receiver and sender (also make sure to note the namespace you give your project/app).
For the receiver, have a look at this example provided by google: https://github.com/googlecast/cast-android-sample/blob/master/receiver/receiver.html
This is a basic media player handler. This will suffice for what you've requested.
You will need to replace the sections 'YOUR_APP_ID_HERE', and [cast.receiver.RemoteMedia.NAMESPACE] with your AppID and Namespace. Otherwise, it is ready to use "as-is".
The sender is a completely different story.
You mention you want to have an HTML sender (as apposed to an android app or ios app as the sender). This will require a hosted scenario (which, with a little configuration, you can make your local PC be the HTML host - AKA local web server software to HOST the html/js/css. Or if you already have a host for your receiver, you may place these sender items on it as well).
I'll continue this post in a little while. Have to continue working my "real job" then come back to this lol. Sorry.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try to Keep the post visible, I hope you have a good holiday weekend and please post the sender part whenever you can. Thank you.
Unholyfire said:
Once your device is whitelisted, you can make use of your AppID in the receiver and sender (also make sure to note the namespace you give your project/app).
For the receiver, have a look at this example provided by google: https://github.com/googlecast/cast-android-sample/blob/master/receiver/receiver.html
This is a basic media player handler. This will suffice for what you've requested.
You will need to replace the sections 'YOUR_APP_ID_HERE', and [cast.receiver.RemoteMedia.NAMESPACE] with your AppID and Namespace. Otherwise, it is ready to use "as-is".
The sender is a completely different story.
You mention you want to have an HTML sender (as apposed to an android app or ios app as the sender). This will require a hosted scenario (which, with a little configuration, you can make your local PC be the HTML host - AKA local web server software to HOST the html/js/css. Or if you already have a host for your receiver, you may place these sender items on it as well).
I'll continue this post in a little while. Have to continue working my "real job" then come back to this lol. Sorry.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello - Does anyone have a step by step on how to intercept SSL App Store traffic using BURP and a Windows 8 phone? I know that installed the BURP cert onto the phone is required. So steps on how to do this on the Windows 8 Phone would be great appreciated.
shadowD1026 said:
Hello - Does anyone have a step by step on how to intercept SSL App Store traffic using BURP and a Windows 8 phone? I know that installed the BURP cert onto the phone is required. So steps on how to do this on the Windows 8 Phone would be great appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Whatever you're trying to do, it probably won't work due to certificate-pinning.
DaviUnic said:
Whatever you're trying to do, it probably won't work due to certificate-pinning.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The App does not use cert pinning.
The store does. This basically eliminates any possibilities of MITM attacks without having the root MS certificate.
DaviUnic said:
The store does. This basically eliminates any possibilities of MITM attacks without having the root MS certificate.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Correct..the store does. But I have sideloaded an app from a client that is having a pen test done. Therefore no cert pinning.
*SIGH* stop assuming things, people. Burp Suite is a *very* standard pen-testing tool. "The App does not use cert pinning" was a dead giveaway that the OP was talking about pen-testing a mobile app.
In theory, the process is really simple. Export the Burp public CA (Proxy -> Options -> Proxy Listeners -> CA certificate; make sure to rename it as a .CER file) and send it to the phone (Bluetooth, email, etc.; you should get a prompt to import the cert). Unfortunately, Burp is kind of lazy about how it generates its root certificates, so by default, the phone doesn't treat them as CA root certs. You can generate a custom cert manually and install it on the phone + have burp use it, but that's only going to work for one domain at a time and is a total pain. The other approach that I've found to work (which is silly, but hey, it *does* work) is to do the following:
1) Install Fiddler along with Burp (if you're not on Windows, you can probably use Fiddler via Mono).
2) Run Fiddler, enable SSL interception, disable automatic platform proxy configuration, set the proxy to listen on external connections, and install its root CA cert to the phone (similar to the way you do it from Burp).
3) Set the phone's WiFi proxy options to connect to the Fiddler IP and port.
OK... so far, you're now in a position to intercept traffic. If all you need is basic proxying, this is actually sufficient all by itself, and Fiddler does have a few cool features of its own. However, if you need real pentesting tools, like Burp Suite provides, there's a way to get that anyhow:
4) Run Burp, and set it to listen on a different port than Fiddler is using.
5) In Fiddler's options, configure it to use Burp as the upstream proxy.
6) Disable interception in Fiddler (so you don't have to manually forward traffic all the time) and proceed to use Burp as normal.
Yes, this is silly. It's the easiest solution I've found thus far, though, and I've used it myself.
Heh... I probably just gave technical advice to a competitor. Ah well. Good luck breaking stuff!
GoodDayToDie said:
*SIGH* stop assuming things, people. Burp Suite is a *very* standard pen-testing tool. "The App does not use cert pinning" was a dead giveaway that the OP was talking about pen-testing a mobile app.
In theory, the process is really simple. Export the Burp public CA (Proxy -> Options -> Proxy Listeners -> CA certificate; make sure to rename it as a .CER file) and send it to the phone (Bluetooth, email, etc.; you should get a prompt to import the cert). Unfortunately, Burp is kind of lazy about how it generates its root certificates, so by default, the phone doesn't treat them as CA root certs. You can generate a custom cert manually and install it on the phone + have burp use it, but that's only going to work for one domain at a time and is a total pain. The other approach that I've found to work (which is silly, but hey, it *does* work) is to do the following:
1) Install Fiddler along with Burp (if you're not on Windows, you can probably use Fiddler via Mono).
2) Run Fiddler, enable SSL interception, disable automatic platform proxy configuration, set the proxy to listen on external connections, and install its root CA cert to the phone (similar to the way you do it from Burp).
3) Set the phone's WiFi proxy options to connect to the Fiddler IP and port.
OK... so far, you're now in a position to intercept traffic. If all you need is basic proxying, this is actually sufficient all by itself, and Fiddler does have a few cool features of its own. However, if you need real pentesting tools, like Burp Suite provides, there's a way to get that anyhow:
4) Run Burp, and set it to listen on a different port than Fiddler is using.
5) In Fiddler's options, configure it to use Burp as the upstream proxy.
6) Disable interception in Fiddler (so you don't have to manually forward traffic all the time) and proceed to use Burp as normal.
Yes, this is silly. It's the easiest solution I've found thus far, though, and I've used it myself.
Heh... I probably just gave technical advice to a competitor. Ah well. Good luck breaking stuff!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are always such a a help on these boards. It's great. Would the same be true if using the emulator? Or would that differ?
The emulator is a full virtual machine, so it almost certainly has its own cert store (instead of using the host system's store) and therefore you'd have the same problems. I'm not even sure how practical it would be to install the cert to the emulator; I've never tried. If you have the source, you could temporarily disable cert checking in the app I guess... but then, that's one of the most common findings I have with mobile apps, so don't do that unless you've tested the default SSL configuration very closely.
Also, I'm not actually sure how to set the proxy in the emulator. I've never tried before. Probably just easier all around to use a real phone.
Burp isn't showing traffic
GoodDayToDie said:
The emulator is a full virtual machine, so it almost certainly has its own cert store (instead of using the host system's store) and therefore you'd have the same problems. I'm not even sure how practical it would be to install the cert to the emulator; I've never tried. If you have the source, you could temporarily disable cert checking in the app I guess... but then, that's one of the most common findings I have with mobile apps, so don't do that unless you've tested the default SSL configuration very closely.
Also, I'm not actually sure how to set the proxy in the emulator. I've never tried before. Probably just easier all around to use a real phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok...stupid question regarding:
5) In Fiddler's options, configure it to use Burp as the upstream proxy.
I went into Fiddler and selected WinINET options to set Burp as the upstream proxy. So, in Burp, I have it listening on port 8080, All Interfaces, and Generate CA-Signed per host cert. Now in the WinINET (IE Settings), I have port 8080 but I'm not sure what to to put in for the Address field. Do I put my machine name or a specific ip? Burp is listening on all interfaces, so I obv don't want to put in localhost or 127.0.0.1. I also have the WP8 wifi settings to point to my machine name and fiddlers port 8888. I can see the traffic in Fiddler but not burp.
Please help. Thank you
First of all, I said in Fiddler's settings, not in WinINET ("Internet Options"). Tools -> Fiddler Options... -> Gateway -> Manual proxy configuration -> localhost:<PORT>.
With that said, you can just use the system proxy settings too (that's the default behavior in Fiddler); I don't recommend it though because then everything on your box will route through Burp which has unfortunate impacts on network performance and RAM usage.
Internet Properties -> Connections -> LAN settings -> "Use a proxy server for your LAN" -> Address: localhost, Port: <PORT>
In both cases, "<PORT>" means whatever port Burp is listening on (8080). I have no idea what you mean by "Burp is listening on all interfaces, so I obv don't want to put in localhost or 127.0.0.1" given that
A) that is exactly what you want to do
B) there is nothing I can think of that would even remotely lead to believe otherwise.
Granted, loopback is not an explicit network interface on Windows the way it is on Linux, but it is still treated as one in the kernel. Listening on "all interfaces" just means the socket was bound to 0.0.0.0 (or IPAddress.Any in .NET; there's an equivalent option in Java). Listening on 0.0.0.0 will get messages routed both through external interfaces and through localhost (127.0.0.1), or localhost wouldn't be nearly as much use...
GoodDayToDie said:
First of all, I said in Fiddler's settings, not in WinINET ("Internet Options"). Tools -> Fiddler Options... -> Gateway -> Manual proxy configuration -> localhost:<PORT>.
With that said, you can just use the system proxy settings too (that's the default behavior in Fiddler); I don't recommend it though because then everything on your box will route through Burp which has unfortunate impacts on network performance and RAM usage.
Internet Properties -> Connections -> LAN settings -> "Use a proxy server for your LAN" -> Address: localhost, Port: <PORT>
In both cases, "<PORT>" means whatever port Burp is listening on (8080). I have no idea what you mean by "Burp is listening on all interfaces, so I obv don't want to put in localhost or 127.0.0.1" given that
A) that is exactly what you want to do
B) there is nothing I can think of that would even remotely lead to believe otherwise.
Granted, loopback is not an explicit network interface on Windows the way it is on Linux, but it is still treated as one in the kernel. Listening on "all interfaces" just means the socket was bound to 0.0.0.0 (or IPAddress.Any in .NET; there's an equivalent option in Java). Listening on 0.0.0.0 will get messages routed both through external interfaces and through localhost (127.0.0.1), or localhost wouldn't be nearly as much use...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fiddler gateway manual setting worked. Appreciate your time and help. Sorry if my last post was confusing or stated wrong.
shadowD1026 said:
Hello - Does anyone have a step by step on how to intercept SSL App Store traffic using BURP and a Windows 8 phone? I know that installed the BURP cert onto the phone is required. So steps on how to do this on the Windows 8 Phone would be great appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know your question is related to "Burp" but then too felt like sharing a simple and elegant way to intercept SSL traffic for windows phone 8.
This blog contains step-by-step tutorial to set up traffic interception (both HTTP and HTTPs).
rikk(dot)it/blog/capture-windows-phone-8-network-traffic-with-fiddler/
:good:
Best way to do it...
shadowD1026 said:
Hello - Does anyone have a step by step on how to intercept SSL App Store traffic using BURP and a Windows 8 phone? I know that installed the BURP cert onto the phone is required. So steps on how to do this on the Windows 8 Phone would be great appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can do it very easy. Default cert file' type of burp is "cacert.der", which is not recognized by windows phone. therefore, you can open 127.0.0.1 8080 which is the burp listener on your PC, then you will see the burp page, click on the "CA Certificate". then you will see the cacert.der is downloading. TIP: You must rename it. YES, you must rename it to "cacert.cer". then push it to your windows phone (e.g. by sending email to your inbox in you WP).
It is the time to open that file in your windows phone, then press install button. Finish.
"I decided to write things that I learned by experience. We always use the other's experiences by searching the web, but how much we pay time to write our experiences?"