[HN Gopher] Dooble Web Browser
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Dooble Web Browser
Author : smartmic
Score : 26 points
Date : 2023-04-08 21:17 UTC (1 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (textbrowser.github.io)
(TXT) w3m dump (textbrowser.github.io)
| snvzz wrote:
| This is just another browser using Qt's WebEngine (uses
| chromium's blink underneath) lib.
|
| It would be interesting if it was an actual new engine.
|
| Alternative (non-khtml-derivative nor gecko) open-source engines
| sorted by descended perception of liveliness include:
| Ladybird[0], NetSurf[1], Links[2] and Dillo[3].
|
| 0. https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/tree/master/Ladybird
|
| 1. https://www.netsurf-browser.org/
|
| 2. http://links.twibright.com/about.php
|
| 3. https://www.dillo.org/
| jug wrote:
| Ladybird is so crazy. How they are accomplishing that much in
| this short period of time with their manpower. I mean, it's no
| small feat to make a web browser render many of today's
| websites.
|
| I wonder if it's skill or a good underlying rendering
| architecture that allows rapid evolution like this.
|
| I've learnt that reinventing the wheel to "get it right" is
| usually a fallacy among junior devs, but I wonder how much
| cruft that hampers productivity accumulates in a highly complex
| renderer over time.
| pipeline_peak wrote:
| Writing a browser engine that supports the modern web and run
| on personal computers is never going to happen unless there's
| some legal intervention. All the examples you've given are
| living proof.
|
| We're at the mercy of Blink and WebKit. The latter only due to
| Apples iron grip on iOS browsers.
| callumprentice wrote:
| https://awesomekling.github.io/Ladybird-a-new-cross-
| platform...
|
| A mammoth task but the Serenity team is making huge progress.
| quicklime wrote:
| It's not impossible, and the examples listed are living proof
| that it is possible.
|
| People often cite the failure of Edge/Trident - even with the
| resources of Microsoft, it's still impossible to compete with
| Google.
|
| But there's a big difference between "competing with Google
| and taking significant market share away from Chrome" and
| just "writing a browser engine that supports the modern web
| and runs on personal computers". The latter is definitely not
| impossible.
| paulryanrogers wrote:
| Page wasn't clear what it is though the GitHub project had this:
|
| > Dooble is a scientific browser. Minimal, cute, unusually
| stable, and available almost everywhere. Completed.
|
| Guess it's not so completed if they're still updating.
| andybak wrote:
| What a terrible post and/or landing page (HN's rules probably
| hamstrung OP to some degree).
|
| Absolutely lacking in any context. I'm still unclear about the
| "why should I care?" part.
| blueflow wrote:
| I found it to be a refreshing contrast to all these websites
| that try to sell me some software or product. And the sort of
| things mentioned in the changelog gives a good impression
| about the state of the codebase.
| user00012-ab wrote:
| There are like 100 new things on HN every day. No one is
| really going to look at your page if you give 0 explanation
| on what it is or why someone should care. Even a 1
| paragraph about summary would have been useful.
|
| Even the title here was completely void of any meaning on
| what this was.
| blueflow wrote:
| Its a web browser.
| andybak wrote:
| We have those. Why is this one interesting or different?
|
| Heck. What rendering engine is it using?
| blueflow wrote:
| I found it interesting because it has stability written
| on their Github page and the Change log reads like a
| matured project. I might try it as replacement for
| Firefox. I don't know what you would find interesting.
| andybak wrote:
| I didn't make it to the changelog because I had nothing
| that gave me a sense of whether this was worth digging
| into.
| masukomi wrote:
| I had the same reaction. I came to the comments here hoping
| someone had already explained "why i should care" or "why i
| should use this". Alas...
| stareatgoats wrote:
| Earlier discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29736882
| (December 30, 2021, 52 comments)
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(page generated 2023-04-08 23:00 UTC)