Gork@lemm.ee to linuxmemes@lemmy.world · 9 months agoCompile it (yet) againfiles.catbox.moevideomessage-square12fedilinkarrow-up1221arrow-down14cross-posted to: technologie
arrow-up1217arrow-down1videoCompile it (yet) againfiles.catbox.moeGork@lemm.ee to linuxmemes@lemmy.world · 9 months agomessage-square12fedilinkcross-posted to: technologie
minus-squareLunya \ she/it@iusearchlinux.fyilinkfedilinkarrow-up2·9 months agoIs that chromium too by any chance?
minus-squarepalordrolap@kbin.sociallinkfedilinkarrow-up2·9 months agoIt’s Chromium’s non-Google cousin. If that piques your interest, be aware that it’s mostly Apple’s baby. And to swing back positive again, it’s open-source because Apple didn’t create it in the first place and they’re bound by GPL to keep it that way. Finally, a useful fun fact: WebKit GTK often comes with a MiniBrowser program that is a bare-bones web browser wrapped around the engine. It isn’t symlinked in /usr/bin or anywhere like that, but it does work as an emergency secondary browser if something breaks your main one. It’s usually found somewhere like /usr/lib/{OS type}/webkitgtk-{version}/MiniBrowser On my machine it’s /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/webkit2gtk-4.1/MiniBrowser
minus-squareLunya \ she/it@iusearchlinux.fyilinkfedilinkarrow-up1·9 months agoOh right, webkit (I seem to be bad at understanding the words I’m reading). I love that most modern web engines are just forks of KHTML
minus-squarelibrecat@lemmy.basedcount.comlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·9 months agoI’ve never emerged chromium, proud waterfox user :)
Is that chromium too by any chance?
It’s Chromium’s non-Google cousin.
If that piques your interest, be aware that it’s mostly Apple’s baby.
And to swing back positive again, it’s open-source because Apple didn’t create it in the first place and they’re bound by GPL to keep it that way.
Finally, a useful fun fact: WebKit GTK often comes with a
MiniBrowser
program that is a bare-bones web browser wrapped around the engine.It isn’t symlinked in
/usr/bin
or anywhere like that, but it does work as an emergency secondary browser if something breaks your main one.It’s usually found somewhere like
/usr/lib/{OS type}/webkitgtk-{version}/MiniBrowser
On my machine it’s
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/webkit2gtk-4.1/MiniBrowser
Oh right, webkit (I seem to be bad at understanding the words I’m reading). I love that most modern web engines are just forks of KHTML
I’ve never emerged chromium, proud waterfox user :)