• @coolmojo@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        99 months ago

        Have a look at Otter browser It aims to replicate the old interface. It is using QtWebEngine as Presto was closed source. It is in development since 10 years now. And it is open source.

        • baduhai
          link
          fedilink
          English
          59 months ago

          QtWebEngine is Chromium :(

          It’s Chromium all the way down.

          • @coolmojo@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            19 months ago

            Qt WebEngine uses code from the Chromium project. However, it is not containing all of Chrome/Chromium: Binary files are stripped out Auxiliary services that talk to Google platforms are stripped out, Source

            • baduhai
              link
              fedilink
              English
              1
              edit-2
              9 months ago

              While that’s one of the reasons I don’t want to use chromium, it’s not actually the main reason, if so I’d just use Ungoogled Chromium. I just want more web engines, and I dont want google to monopolise the internet.

              • @coolmojo@lemmy.world
                link
                fedilink
                English
                19 months ago

                It is super hard to create a new web engine, especially when one company is influencing the web standards and most web developers are only testing against that because of market share. This is why we ended up with four active web engines. In alphabetical order: Blink, Gecko, Goanna, WebKit. Obviously some are related: WebKit started out as the fork of KDE’s KHTML and Blink is the fork of WebKit. Goanna is the fork of the Unified XUL Platform that was forked from Mozilla’s Gecko.