There are no other changes other than bringing. And we are worse off for it.īet Mozilla's reconsidering that stupid embedding decision now. TenFourFox Feature Parity Release 11 final is now available for testing (downloads, hashes, release notes). So this means Chromium arrogates more browsershare to itself and Firefox will continue to be the second class citizen until it, too, has too small a marketshare to be relevant. The little ones like NetSurf, bless its heart, don't have enough marketshare (or currently features) to rate, Trident in Internet Explorer 11 is intentionally obsolete, and the rest are too deficient to be anywhere near usable (Dillo, etc.). 1) Produce 1 or 2 builds a year with updated certificates and possible other small updates after Sept when the unofficial TFF security updates end. But given how much DNA WebKit and Blink share, that means there are effectively two current major rendering engines left: Chromium and Gecko (Firefox). Here is the first official build of InterWeb for Tiger and Leopard. In the sense that Anaheim won't (at least in name) be Google, just Chromium, there's reason to believe that it won't have the repeated privacy erosions that have characterized Google's recent moves with Chrome itself. No word on whether this next browser, codenamed Anaheim, will still be called Edge. Microsoft engineers have already been spotted committing to the Chromium codebase, apparently for the ARM version. In retrospect this should have been obvious when the mobile version of Microsoft Edge was announced to use Chromium (and not Microsoft's own rendering engine EdgeHTML), but now rumour has it that Edge on its own home turf - Windows 10 - will be Chromium too. I used to think that WebKit would eat the world, but later on I realized it was Blink.
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