Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 7th Nov 2008 09:45 UTC, submitted by mlauzon
Internet Explorer Most of the popular browsers these days are based on one of the two open source rendering engines - khtml/WebKit and Gecko. The most popular browser, however, is based on proprietary technology: Internet Explorer. Even though IE made some progress during the past few years, it's no secret that it took Microsoft far too long to counter the success of Mozilla's Firefox. Currently, Microsoft is working (and thus, spending money) on Internet Explorer 8, and this prompted an audience member during a keynote by Steve Ballmer to ask an interesting question: is it worth spending money on IE, with so many open source engines readily available? Ballmer's reply may surprise you.
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RE[3]: Security
by aesiamun on Fri 7th Nov 2008 15:42 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Security"
aesiamun
Member since:
2005-06-29

But it is a fork...it started as a fork of the source code.

Apple forked KHTML and created WebKit

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RE[4]: Security
by tyrione on Fri 7th Nov 2008 19:13 in reply to "RE[3]: Security"
tyrione Member since:
2005-11-21

But it is a fork...it started as a fork of the source code.

Apple forked KHTML and created WebKit


Holy crap. Yes. WebKit was "originally" a fork of KHTML/KJS. That's where it ends. The growth, scope and size of WebKit Project dwarfs KDE's projects tenfold. With WebKit we now have 4 distinct ports and growing.

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RE[5]: Security
by aesiamun on Fri 7th Nov 2008 19:19 in reply to "RE[4]: Security"
aesiamun Member since:
2005-06-29

Fine, hide behind your fanboyim all you want. Webkit was and still is a fork of the KHTML Engine and libraries.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 12

RE[5]: Security
by berzerko on Fri 7th Nov 2008 20:48 in reply to "RE[4]: Security"
berzerko Member since:
2005-11-11

once a fork, always a fork...

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 6