Le 23.10.2013 14:36, Marko Randjelovic a écrit :
On Thu, 17 Oct 2013 20:45:55 +0200
Marko Randjelovic <marko...@eunet.rs> wrote:
On Thu, 17 Oct 2013 17:46:16 +0200
berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
> I think that midori is still maintained?
Never heard of it, except in Debian repo, anyway I'll give it a try.
Thanks
I got very frustrated about Webkit (Midori uses Webkit). I found
enormous number of bugs in CVE list, but most of them were related to
products that use Webkit such as Google Chrome, I should determine if
they originated from Webkit or those products, but it was impossible
due to their number, then I wanted to check few of them, but it was
also not possible because Webkit bug tracker didn't allow me to view
relevant page, even when I registered and logged in.
Web browsers that use Webkit: kazehakase, arora, epiphany-browser,
luakit, midori, surf, xxxterm.
I must admit that no webkit browser convinced me until now. You forgot
uzbl, dillo, dwb... all of them are slow and/or buggy. I do not really
think it is because they are using webkit, of course.
On the other hand, there are not a lot of graphical web browsers using
another renderer. Except firefox, IE and opera, I do not know any to be
exact.
If you have any suggestion of webbrowser to try, I will be happy to
learn it's name, even it I need to compile it. Web-browsers are one of
the most use tools nowadays, but no one is really good, even in
mainstream.
The choices I have found are between fast and not too buggy (
mainstream ) which are bloated, and non bloated but surprisingly, slow
and buggy as hell ( all other I have found ).
Of all the non-mainstream ones I tried, the only potentially usable one
was midori.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: http://lists.debian.org/b2e87762a9b3fb4ea7de44549e836...@neutralite.org