This includes the entire Servo team which was working on its next generation web engine that was supposed to be Firefox's ticket to staying afloat in the future. Servo also popularized the Rust language afaik
Aside from Servo, they also axed the entire threat management team, because why would a browser need threat detection and incident response, amirite?
Relevant links:
https://nitter.snopyta.org/directhex/status/1293352458308198401
https://nitter.snopyta.org/MichalPurzynski/status/1293220570885062657
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24120336
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24128865
Sigh they are lowkey fashy neckbeards too afaik
They cancelled their patreon because patreon donated to Black lives matter.
yeaah. also just huge dicks on their forums.
deleted by creator
The thing with konqueror/epiphany/surf/qutebrowser/midori and all of these independent projects is that while they might be decent on their own, the lack of any kind of decent and robust extension system really undermines your privacy
You can set up a DNS-level/host-based ad blocker but it's still not as good as a dedicated extension like uMatrix/NoScript/uBO in advanced (medium/hard) modes.
I think FF is still it. Or at best a fork of it like IceCat.
It will still be a long time before anything becomes comparably as good an option as Firefox, even with the engines stalled and the project adrift. A lot of responsibility for the future of the a Internet just fell in the laps of thankless volunteers though.
I'm not sure how things can be changed, but I think it is essential for us to stop building web browsers (and web services) as if they were space elevators. For all intents and purposes, browsers have grown to levels of complexity rivaling operating systems. I mean, it legitimately takes longer to compile Firefox than it does to compile the Linux Kernel with nearly all the modules enabled.
Obviously we can't go back to gopher, but we have to do something to bring the standards of the web within reach of being implemented by mortals.
They all ultimately use Chromium/WebKit to render. They're not really independent.
Konqueror can be configured to use KHTML, I recommend you try it to see how it looks. It isn't really compatible with most sites in 2020.
yeah I'm aware. Also isn't Konqueror dead? Afaik the browser that KDE develop now is Falkon.
Also I believe Midori and PM/Basilisk have their own engines but they also inherit the compatibility issues that comes with that.
Not sure, haven't kept up with it.