In light of the fact that Firefox has fully succumbed to AI, there isn't really even a less bad browser anymore, right?
So what do we do now?
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In light of the fact that Firefox has fully succumbed to AI, there isn't really even a less bad browser anymore, right?
So what do we do now?
I'll wait and see if it will be turn-offable.
Icefox or Vanadium for mobile?
The more practical idea are:
Some have hope for https://servo.org/ or https://ladybird.org/
I think dumping html5 might be a good idea, google has made building a browser harder than building an operating system.
A silly suggestion emacs with org-mode.
We could also do more native apps and less web apps.
And I'm also becoming really good friends with about:config
https://corteximplant.net/objects/f2d30c92-a64f-4154-940f-99080479f0c8
Sadly we cannot expect anything good from Ladybird (although the original SerenityOS browser still exists, without the problematic lead dev but also without the resources he brought).
Sigh...
So how's it going servo? I've compiled it. and rust is kind of cool.
I was also thinking more native apps and the web being more about documents again.
I feel like all the multimedia features really upped the complexity of modern web browsers.
Fork Firefox, or use a new engine like Servo. Either way, the challenge is finding enough resources to make and maintain a secure browser; at least if you mean a browser with similar features to the big three, i.e. an entire cross-platform operating system.
Existing Firefox forks do not have those resources and are not safe.
Something simpler could be secured with less resources, but may have no uptake.
I don't have good answers for the web.
I'm learning a bit more about Gemini and Gopher protocols, if only because they've different shortcomings and because the barriers-to-entry for development of them haven't been raised so high it enabled enclosure of browser development by corporate interests (and now the web's norms).
I think there's room for a welcome future of smaller online tools offering a "does one thing, does it well" rather than a web browser as convergence product.
Otherwise, yeah... it's just sort of the end.
I think perhaps the problem is the modern internet.
A space for Bonfire maintainers and contributors to communicate