• @Lost_My_Mind
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    138 hours ago

    …I have no idea what this is referencing. Duckduckgo?

      • @[email protected]
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        347 hours ago

        It’s a monumental effort really, building a browser engine from scratch and taking it to daily driver usable is probably among the most difficult programming challenges. It’s way easier to build a new Linux kernel from scratch than a browser engine lmao

        Even Microshit tried and gave up because it was so hard

        • @[email protected]
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          377 hours ago

          Even Microshit tried and gave up because it was so hard

          They also failed at building operative systems, so not sure they are the best example.

        • @m4m4m4m4
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          5 hours ago

          Even Microshit tried and gave up because it was so hard

          Not exactly. Yes a browser engine is one of the most, if not the most, complex pieces of software.

          But if it was almost impossible to create a web engine then this, or KDE’s KHTML, or Servo, or NetSurf, or Kraken, or you-name-it wouldn’t exist.

          Then how come (one of) the most powerful tech company in the world couldn’t make it, you ask? They already had a “functional” web engine. But what they had from the beginning was absolute shit that did not respect any web standard. And oh boy we people who fought against that shit trying to support it do know. Its baggage was immensely huge and shitty that after a while and the speed Chrome was taking over they found it was easier to yeet it altogether, and I do hope that piece of shit is burning in hell because it made our lifes so miserable.

          Note that Opera did the same thing with their web engine - they gave up with it mostly because they found easier to jump in the Blink bandwagon, without realizing they were making Opera just another Chromium skin without much value, contrary to what Presto was.

          Kinda what could happen if one day Microsoft decided to try make Windows to be as functional, fast and permissive as Linux.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 hours ago

            Because if a website doesn’t work in your browser, but it works in everyone else’s, no one will say “oh that website’s badly written”, instead they say “what a shitty browser”.

            So you have a huge web standard you have to respect, and then all the websites with non standard code you have to make work anyway.

      • @[email protected]
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        47 hours ago

        What happened to the logo. I swear like 2 years ago it was a picture of an actual ladybird

        • @[email protected]
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          1 hour ago

          Accelerated Firefox timeline.

          That used to have a picture of an actual Phoenix and then a red panda before it got streamlined.

          If ladybird keep going at this rate, everyone will be trying to cancel them by the middle of next week

          • TXL
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            24 hours ago

            How hard is it to do some web searches first before you announce a new name for your project?