I gotta say, out of all good things KDE has done to the world, KHTML is not one of them. Thanks to that we now have Safari and Chrome which both suck.
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I gotta say, out of all good things KDE has done to the world, KHTML is not one of them. Thanks to that we now have Safari and Chrome which both suck.
Don Melton on the unveiling of Safari: > What you also can’t hear on the video is someone about 15 to 20 rows behind where we were sitting — obviously expecting the word “Gecko” up there — shout at what seemed like the top of his lungs: > “WHAT THE FUCK!?” > KHTML may have been a bigger surprise than Apple doing a browser at all. And that moment was glorious. We had punk’d the entire crowd.
Everyone was clapping that Apple embraced open source. Happy, happy, happy. And they were just certain what was coming next. Then Steve moved a new slide onto the screen. With only one word, “KHTML” — six-foot-high white letters on a blue background. If you listen to that video I posted, notice that no one applauds here. Why? I’m guessing confusion and complete lack of recognition. What you also can’t hear on the video is someone about 15 to 20 rows behind where we were sitting — obviously expecting the word “Gecko” up there — shout at what seemed like the top of his lungs: “WHAT THE FUCK!?” KHTML may have been a bigger surprise than Apple doing a browser at all. And that moment was glorious. We had punk’d the entire crowd.
Safari is released to the world
Image via Wikipedia
My Google Chrome™ Extensions Generated: Sun, 11 Dec 2011 11:15:53 GMT User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/535.2 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/15.0.874.121 Safari/535.2 Extensions: 7
Google Shortcuts (official Firefox port) v1.6.1.3 Choose from 160 Google services to show up as buttons in a space-saving popup. Official Firefox extension port.
Share Extensions v0.0.9 Export your favorite Google Chrome™ extensions as BBCode, HTML, Wiki or text list for your Blog. Share the extensions via Twitter, Google Buzz™, Google Mail™ or add them to Google Bookmarks™ lists. Also you can directly enable/disable your extensions.
RSS Share for Google Plus™ and Google Reader™ v1.1.2 Google+™ and Google Reader™ Integration. 'Share on Google+' button on Google Reader. Google Reader in Google Plus.
Zemanta v0.7.1 Enhance your blog with Zemanta for Google Chrome
LastPass v1.80.3 LastPass is a free password manager and form filler. LastPass is also available for Firefox, Internet Explorer and Safari.
Extended Share for Google Plus v2.0.2.3 Extends Google+ to share to Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and many more.
Diigo: Bookmark, Archive, Highlight & Sticky-Note v1.6.8 Highlighter & post-it notes, bookmark & archive. All-in-one research tool.
Disabled Extensions: 0 Apps: 2
Yoono WebApp v1.0.0.16 All your social networks and IM services in one web app.
Photo Zoom for Google+™, Facebook etc. v0.0.0.7 Enlarge thumbnails on mouse over. Works on Flickr, Twitter, Reddit and hundreds of sites
Exported with Chrome Extensions Share
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Today is the tenth anniversary of Apple’s open-source WebKit codebase, which powers nearly every relevant web browser and engine used today, including Safari, Chrome, and even WebOS itself.
To think that so many have criticised Apple for "taking" KHTML and didn't make WebKit "open", what about the already-open Gecko (Firefox) rendering engine?