I use epiphany quite a bit, and like it a lot, though there are
websites on which it crashes.  It uses the same toolkit as midori and
in my opinion has a somewhat better user interface.  Don't know
whether it works on i386 at this point.

Dave Raymond

On 1/7/22, Crystal Kolipe <kolip...@exoticsilicon.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 07, 2022 at 05:06:24PM +0100, Josuah Demangeon wrote:
>
>> * https://surf.suckless.org/ (webkit/gtk+)
>
> Surf would work well on his hardware, but it's minimal interface is somewhat
> different to a traditional web browser, and probably not what he is
> expecting.
>
> It also has some fairly unique issues with some websites due to the way
> non-html links are passed to curl.  Session cookies are not passed to the
> curl instance, so downloading anything that requires authentication from any
> kind of portal that you're logged in to generally doesn't work, (think
> statements on internet banking, etc).  Surf also often chokes on pop-up
> windows that have a javascript target URI, and there are a few other
> oddities as well.
>
> Having said that, I use surf a lot, our website definitely works well in
> Surf, and the way you can drive Surf completely via keyboard navigation is
> excellent.
>
>> * https://sourceforge.net/projects/midori-browser/ (as on Raspbian)
>
> Midori might be worth looking at as a light-weight browser replacement for
> Firefox, although I haven't used it for a number of years.
>
>> But you might encounter increasingly more websites that do not work
>> with them, as the web grows in complexity.
>
> Agreed.
>
>


-- 
David J. Raymond
david.raym...@nmt.edu
http://kestrel.nmt.edu/~raymond

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