Blink, Google's new Chrome browser engine, comes to life

    Blink, Google's new Chrome browser engine, comes to life


    Posted: 04 Apr 2013
    The starting code base for what will become Chrome 28 is in place, and programmers are already updating it. Blink's birth was not without labor pains, though.

    Blink, Google's new fork of the WebKit browser engine, is alive.

    Yesterday, Google announced the project, which splits its browser work from Apple's in the open-source WebKit project. Today, Blink is up and running.

    The first updates -- including a new list of 36 Blink "owners" who have authority to approve changes -- are arriving.

    "Chrome 28 will be the first blinking release," Chrome programmer Mike West said in a Hacker News comment. The current stable version of Chrome is version 26; new versions arrive about every six weeks.

    Read more at source:
    Blink, Google's new Chrome browser engine, comes to life | Internet & Media - CNET News
    Brink's Avatar Posted By: Brink
    04 Apr 2013



  1. Posts : 19,383
    Windows 10 Pro x64 ; Xubuntu x64
       #1

    Google Forking WebKit To Create New Rendering Engine


    Google announced last night that it’s going to stop using WebKit — the rendering engine currently used by the likes of Safari and Chrome to display web pages — in favour of its own solution, which will be called Blink.
    Google Forking WebKit To Create New Rendering Engine | Gizmodo Australia
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 568
    Windows 7 64-bit, Windows 8.1 64-bit, OSX El Capitan, Windows 10 (VMware)
       #2

    Golden said:
    Google announced last night that it’s going to stop using WebKit — the rendering engine currently used by the likes of Safari and Chrome to display web pages — in favour of its own solution, which will be called Blink.
    Google Forking WebKit To Create New Rendering Engine | Gizmodo Australia
    Quote from the link above:
    That’s mainly because of the way Chrome uses different methods to display web pages compared to other browsers — each tab in Chrome is a separate process — and WebKit doesn’t quite fit the mould.
    That's not quite true...

    IE10 with Enhanced Protected Mode enabled runs each tab in a separate process, or sandboxed. For that matter, the first time the Protected Mode has become available was in 2006 for IE7 on Vista.

    Internet Explorer 10 gets a new sandbox : Enhanced Protected Mode

    Chrome started to be available in 2008...
      My Computer


 

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