dillo-plus
dillo-plugin-gemini
dillo-plus | dillo-plugin-gemini | |
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4 | 1 | |
82 | 7 | |
- | - | |
7.7 | 3.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 6 days ago | |
C++ | Shell | |
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.
dillo-plus
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Show HN: Dillo 3.1.0 released after 9 years
Dillo Plus supports external media playback (https://github.com/crossbowerbt/dillo-plus/#external-media-p...), maybe it could be backported to Dillo?
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Resurrecting the Dillo Browser
The Dillo+ (Dillo-Plus) project has already added Gopher and Gemini support to their fork of Dillo:
https://github.com/crossbowerbt/dillo-plus
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Google engineers want to make ad-blocking (near) impossible
There are many, many, many web browsers that are not corporate-controlled. Some of my favourites lately are the Argonaut Constellation [0] – mostly because of the interesting technical decisions going in the development (particularly the CSS and the Haskell), but also because Rhapsode is already better than eSpeakNG + AT-SPI2 + Firefox.
There's also the venerable lynx, and elinks (which I reluctantly admit is better than lynx, even if I don't use it much), and Dillo+ [1] (a fork / continuation of Dillo that supports Gopher and Gemini). And could I forget NetSurf, with its graph-y history navigation? And of course, Ladybird, [2] probably the best-funded of the lot.
These are just the ones I've heard of. There are surely dozens more you'd be interested in, and thousands of little hobby projects. Why not try making your own web browser?
[0]: https://argonaut-constellation.org/
[1]: https://github.com/crossbowerbt/dillo-plus
[2]: https://ladybird.dev/
dillo-plugin-gemini
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Resurrecting the Dillo Browser
Thanks for your DPI work. I tested the gemini plugin and works very well.
My only complain is that it keeps asking to confirm new keys every time a new server is visited which causes a lot of friction to explore several gemini servers. I understand that is a tradeoff between usability and security, but I wish there was a better solution than that.
For now I uploaded Charles plugin written in shell script[1], which always trusts the certificate.
[1]: https://github.com/dillo-browser/dillo-plugin-gemini/
But I'm considering switching to the Go version if I can find a way to improve the UX.
Also, I kindly ask you to add the tag "dillo-plugin" so you can make Dillo plugins easily discoverable by searching for the tag in GitHub[2].
[2]: https://github.com/topics/dillo-plugin
> I believe that in recent versions of Dillo, even https is implemented as a DPI plugin.
This was done initially[3] (before 2007) but it was moved to the browser itself[4] in 2016.
[3]: https://github.com/dillo-browser/dillo/commits/afd2763caa56d...
[4]: https://github.com/dillo-browser/dillo/commit/bf5a7783f4a192...
What are some alternatives?
ncgopher - A gopher and gemini client for the modern internet
teams-cli - A CLI / TUI for Microsoft Teams
Web-Environment-Integrity
purple-teams - A MS Teams plugin for libpurple/Pidgin (3rd party client)
phetch - 🐭 quick lil gopher client for your terminal
kristall - Graphical small-internet client for windows, linux, MacOS X and BSDs. Supports gemini, http, https, gopher, finger.
Buran - Gemini browser for Android
dillo - Dillo, a multi-platform graphical web browser
fenix - Iceraven Browser [Moved to: https://github.com/fork-maintainers/iceraven-browser]
standards-positions
lounge-lizard - Fast open source Slack desktop app
dpi - Go framework for DPI (Dillo plugins)