Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 13th Jun 2007 10:30 UTC, submitted by Francis Kuntz
KDE "Ars Technica sat down today to talk with KHTML developer and Trolltech employee, Lars Knoll. We talked about his involvement in the project that ultimately became the HTML rendering engine for Apple's Safari web browser, as well how Apple's involvement has shaped the future of web browsing for browsers on just about every platform imaginable."
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RE[3]: Interesting viewpoint...
by Governa on Wed 13th Jun 2007 19:02 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Interesting viewpoint..."
Governa
Member since:
2006-04-09

@ Shade

Slightly better?

"Over time, Apple spend significant resources to retool their relationship with KHTML and the open-source community in general by making the Webkit project an open-source one. It was complete with an anonymous CVS repository, a full history of changes from Apple's very first involvement in the project, a comprehensive web site with Bugzilla bug tracking, blog, mailing lists, IRC channel, and information for developers if they would like to help the project in any capacity."

I would say that they are now perfect.

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RE[4]: Interesting viewpoint...
by Shade on Wed 13th Jun 2007 19:18 in reply to "RE[3]: Interesting viewpoint..."
Shade Member since:
2005-07-07

Fair enough ;) That's what I get for skimming. I was mostly REing in relation to the original KHTML drama. For some reason 'things are good' just doesn't stick in the head as well as, "Yarr!!! They be ebil."

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