Question:
Mozilla Firefox will not open Youtube, Myspace, or my yahoo email?
dirren b
2008-10-06 17:41:50 UTC
when i visit myspace.com it will say "Bad Request (Request Header Too Long)", then Youtube.com "Bad Request

Your browser sent a request that this server could not understand.
Size of a request header field exceeds server limit.

Cookie: VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE=uyg... and ETC", email just will not open.
I do have the latest version of Firefox and i have reinstaled it about 4 times.
Three answers:
2008-10-06 17:56:49 UTC
try clearing your cache and cookies first
amie
2016-05-30 17:51:05 UTC
hopefully this will explain things :) Outline Section 2-3 Vocabulary Monomer – small compounds Polymer – large compounds formed by smaller monomers Carbohydrate – compounds made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms (1:2:1) Monosaccharide – Single sugar molecules Polysaccharide- large molecules formed from monosaccharides Lipid – large and varied group of biological molecules not soluble. Fats, oils, waxes Nucleic acids – Macromolecules containing hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorous Nucleotide – composed of (a 5-carbon sugar, a phosphate group, nitrogenous base) Ribonucleic acid (RNA) – contains sugar ribose Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) - contains sugar deoxyribose Protein – macromolecules that contain nitrogen and carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen Amino acid – polymers of molecules I. The Chemistry of Carbon a. Carbon has 4 valence electrons which can bond to other carbon atoms any many other elements making carbon most versatile element i. Can form chains that are unlimited in length II. Macromolecules a. Large compounds built by linking small ones together i. Organic compounds broken into four groups (carbs, lipids, nucleic acids, and proteins) III. Carbohydrates a. Ratio of 1:2:1 and is MAIN source of energy for living things i. Also used by plants and some animals for structural purposes (sugar) IV. Lipids a. Categories include fats, oils, and waxes and defined as saturated and polyunsaturated V. Nucleic Acids a. DNA and RNA; monomers form nucleotides VI. Proteins a. Macromolecules that have many functions and four levels of organization.
randell p
2008-10-06 18:21:27 UTC
try clearing stuff it might work


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