ladybird
mhwaveedit
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ladybird | mhwaveedit | |
---|---|---|
9 | 2 | |
512 | 40 | |
- | - | |
8.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 months ago | |
C++ | C | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ladybird
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Dillo web browser homepage is for sale
You're in luck, Andreas has been hacking on that since a couple of months. They're calling the Linux version of the browser Ladybird: https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird
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Which browser should I use? I am looking for privacy and less RAM eating.
LadyBird
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Note, the first time you ever run the render() method, it will download Chromium into your home directory (e.g. ~/.pyppeteer/). This only happens once.
Why not ladybird? https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird
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Upgrading from Debian Jessie to Bullseye after nearly 30 years
The page loads fine in Ladybird[1] on Arch. It's the browser purpose-built for SerenityOS[2] using a in-house HTTP/JS/TLS engine that hasn't matured to the point of practical usability yet. If I were a site administrator using some kind of weird metric to block a browser, this thing would definitely go on the blacklist.
As for a more common uncommon browser, GNOME Web (WebKit) also works fine.
Whatever is causing you to get blocked, it's not the browser engine you're using. Check your plugins, antivirus, MITM engines, and whatever else messes with your connection. It could also be a simple IP block because of a bad IP neighbour or a shared CGNAT server.
[1]: https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird
[2]: https://serenityos.org/
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Ladybird: A truly new Web Browser comes to Linux
Ooh, ooh.
I'm on Ubuntu, and it looks like I need to upgrade to 22.04 before I can experience the build process for myself.
https://packages.ubuntu.com/search?suite=jammy§ion=all&a...
The repo itself is shockingly tiny: https://github.com/awesomekling/ladybird. Looks like it needs https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity as well. https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/tree/master/Userland/... is 100kLoC which is also surprisingly small.
- Ladybird Web Browser - The Ladybird Web Browser is a browser using the SerenityOS LibWeb engine with a Qt GUI.
- Ladybird Web Browser
- The birth of a new Linux web engine, Ladybird
- Ladybird Web Browser – SerenityOS LibWeb Engine with a Qt GUI
mhwaveedit
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Dillo web browser homepage is for sale
Re: domains -- good point.
I found some screenshots of Dillo 0.6 -- interesting to see how little the GUI has changed over time, since 2002: https://web.archive.org/web/20020611213502/http://dillo.cips...
I'm not a software engineer, just an unix-minded end-user, but I've always seen this sort of consistency as very good, thoughtful engineering. Having an almost unchanged GUI for 20+ years is an indicator of well thought out defaults early on, I suppose.
Similar projects that come to mind are mhwaveedit and mtPaint (the latter was inspired by the former, /1, 2). I need to do audio work, so mhwaveedit is a gem that, for me, has replaced Audacity almost entirely. Blazing fast, with a consistent, extremely well thought out GUI again.
Eric S. Raymond used Audacity as an example of great unix-y GUI design in "The Art of Unix Programming". I've often thought, that, by now, Audacity somewhat suffers from "feature creep", including GUI-wise. mhwaveedit has managed to escape adding features.
Quoting a passage grom TAOUP: "Several features of this UI are subtly excellent and worthy of emulation /.../. But these are details. The central virtue of this program is that it has a superbly transparent and natural user interface, one that erects as few barriers between the user and the sound file as possible." /3
I'd say Dillo managed to maintain the same core idea in terms of web browsing, have as few barriers between the user and the HTML file as possible. No added bloat, for 22 consecutive years. This is quite remarkable, actually -- as compared to GUI (and other) changes of many other browsers. Obviously, the scope of those "other browser projects" is different as well; it's a different world.
Also, possibly the consistency of the GUI has to do with the use of FLTK, which kind of forces the devs to focus on the bare essentials.
Let's hope that these indications of Dillo's death (because no homepage) are greatly exaggerated. Greetings and a thousand thanks thus far to all of Dillo's devs!
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MtPaint
2. https://github.com/magnush/mhwaveedit
3. http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/taoup/html/ch06s01.html#au...
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I’m now in charge of Audacity. Seriously.[video]
I've always found the Audacity UX to be cumbersome. I hope they make some big changes. I'm not super optimistic, though.
If your needs are simple, I find mhwaveedit[0] much more pleasant to use than Audacity. It also ships with a ton of high quality filters. Really nice piece of software.
0: https://github.com/magnush/mhwaveedit
What are some alternatives?
netsurf - netsurf
audacity - Audio Editor
pyppeteer - Headless chrome/chromium automation library (unofficial port of puppeteer)
waybackpack - Download the entire Wayback Machine archive for a given URL.
docker-http-https-echo - Docker image that echoes request data as JSON; listens on HTTP/S, useful for debugging.
requests-html - Pythonic HTML Parsing for Humans™
KyuWeb - A proposal for a simple document-oriented web.
libjs-test262 - ✅ Tools for running the test262 ECMAScript test suite with SerenityOS's JavaScript engine (LibJS)
bombadillo
b-decoded - arthur whitney's b interpreter translated into a more traditional flavor of C
serenity - The Serenity Operating System 🐞