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Deleted member 111282
Guest
Shout out to @stan for inspiring me to ask this
One unfortunate situation in the Linux community is a lack of funding and staff for software development, which sometimes leads to developers closing up shop and discontinuing their projects. For this topic, I'm going to refer to discontinued browsers specifically. Being that there's numerous ones out there, I want you to mention one you're familiar with and what you'd like to do with it. (I'm just spitballing these questions, so you don't have to answer them if you don't want to) Would you like to have it go through a changing of hands and keep it going without changing the browser itself? Does the particular browser have features you want to remove or improve because you don't like them? In the case of the Tor Browser, would you like to turn .onion links into a onion:// protocol, and then become a drug kingpin? This is your browser now, so the possibilities are completely up to you
It'd be nice to see these ideas become a reality, because then it gives Google a run for it's money in the browser market
One unfortunate situation in the Linux community is a lack of funding and staff for software development, which sometimes leads to developers closing up shop and discontinuing their projects. For this topic, I'm going to refer to discontinued browsers specifically. Being that there's numerous ones out there, I want you to mention one you're familiar with and what you'd like to do with it. (I'm just spitballing these questions, so you don't have to answer them if you don't want to) Would you like to have it go through a changing of hands and keep it going without changing the browser itself? Does the particular browser have features you want to remove or improve because you don't like them? In the case of the Tor Browser, would you like to turn .onion links into a onion:// protocol, and then become a drug kingpin? This is your browser now, so the possibilities are completely up to you
It'd be nice to see these ideas become a reality, because then it gives Google a run for it's money in the browser market