It intentionally doesn't support JavaScript to make things faster and much less resource intensive.
20 1 ReplyNgl if you just don’t support the majority of modern browser features, it’s not hard to make a new browser.
21 0 ReplyNot as hard, I agree but reimplementing just CSS sounds like a very special level of hell.
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But…that’s just a setting on all the browsers
13 0 ReplyW. JavaScript was a mistake.
6 4 ReplyThe stuff like Flash, Java applets and Silverlight it eventually replaced were arguably even worse. There's a legitimate need to run client-side code at times, IMHO the mistake was making it so permissive by default. Blaming the language for the bad browser security model is kind of throwing away the baby with the bathwater.
7 0 Replythis is why i will write my blog from scratch with absolutely no JS or code execution of any kind
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im a bit curious about the cjoice of gtk2 over 3 or 4, but im too eepy sleepy to look deeper rn ill do that later meows >w<
17 2 ReplyFurry day?
6 0 Replyevery day is furry day
if you're the right kind of linux dev1 1 Reply
I think it’s just a place to start:
The browser is currently in Alpha stage
Planned support for systems in the near future: Linux GTK3/4…
2 0 Replyo my goodness i didnt even see that hehe >w< it does look cool meow :3
1 1 Reply
Great to see another brand new browser under active development!
6 0 Replylynx
would like a word...4 0 ReplyMozilla failed to build a new browser from scratch. How did they manage that?
3 0 ReplyThey didn't, not yet at least. What's available right now is barely usable.
2 0 ReplyThanks @warmaster!
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please use https at least for your own website lol
4 2 Replyit has https for me
3 0 Replyi clicked the link, boom certificate warning
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Checkboxes are displayed as input boxes. Well, it's an Alpha.
Tested it with flatfox.ch "Your browser is too old" while it works even with Dillo and Links, seems a useragent-issue.
2 0 Reply