I'm a fan of Open Source and have a growing interest in serverless and edge computing. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but they're doing good work eating bugs. I also stream on Twitch.
I was going to bring this up in the initial discussion post, as the issue has arisen before when people were afraid of an all Chrome world, but i figured someone would bring it up. 👋
For web developers, I still think it's good though. The more we can focus on building applications the better.
I think your point is more about stifling browser innovation?
I was going to bring this up in the initial discussion post, as the issue has arisen before when people were afraid of an all Chrome world, but i figured someone would bring it up. 👋
For web developers, I still think it's good though. The more we can focus on building applications the better.
I think your point is more about stifling browser innovation?
I'll leave these knowledge nuggets here:
Isn't future versions of Chrome powered by Blink, a Chromium fork?
Blink is the HTML rendering that they replaced their initial usage of WebKit (apples property) with.
They didn’t switch completely away, as Blink is a fork of the WebCore component, a part of WebKit.
So long as Chromium does not stagnate as a result of its market share, then I would agree it's a good thing.
As long as Firefox is still serving a good amount of the market, things should only keep chugging along with Chromium.
I got a notification from one of my above comments and with the new chrome manifest announcement my trust in Firefox only grows stronger