On Monday June 18 2018 07:25:30 Duncan wrote:

>FWIW I left konqueror behind back in the kde4 era, when it became very 
>evident that it wasn't getting timely security-fix releases suitable to 
>usage for online banking, etc.

This may or may not have improved, because in the end Konqueror uses 
QtWebEngine or QtWebKit (if you're lucky the up-to-date rebooted version), and 
for both you thus depend on 1) how often the web framework maintainers apply 
security updates and 2) how closely your distribution follows those updates.

In other words, if you want to have the latest browser for security reasons 
you're almost by definition better off installing one of the big ones directly 
"from the source": Google Chrome or Firefox. Possibly even the developer 
version if you're really adamant on always having the latest fixes. That does 
mean accepting to use GTk3-based instead of Qt-based software.

More or less independent projects like Konqueror, QupZilla/Falkon, Epiphany or 
Otter-Browser are nice for niche applications, cross-browser checking of web 
sites you develop or just as a quick and supposedly lightweight browser for 
secondary tasks you don't want to burden your long-running main browser session 
with.

In my case I'm currently still more or less locked in to Google Chrome. I find 
Konqueror mostly "useful" to  compare how QtWebEngine and QtWebKit render 
certain websites in the same browser (you can switch via a menu). For quick, 
short secondary sessions I rather use Otter-Browser because the rebooted 
QtWebKit is both much more lightweight and some 25% faster than Chrome 
(including QtWebEngine). Or I use the FireFox Developer edition because that 
one is about 50% (2x) faster (but at least as RAM hungry as Chrome).

All that to say that I too don't bother with Konqueror whenever something 
doesn't work with it.

R.

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