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Mozilla Firefox Software The Internet

Mozilla Releases First Build of Servo, Its Next-Generation Browser Engine (venturebeat.com) 131

An anonymous reader writes: As promised, Mozilla has released the first Nightly build of Servo, its new browser engine. This is the first tech demo of Servo, which Jack Moffitt, Servo project lead at Mozilla, described to us a few months ago as "a next-generation browser engine focused on performance and robustness." Packages for macOS and Linux are available to download from here: Servo Developer Preview Downloads. Mozilla promises that Windows and Android packages will be available "soon." And because this is Mozilla, you can check out all the code yourself over on GitHub.
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Mozilla Releases First Build of Servo, Its Next-Generation Browser Engine

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    If it can stop choking on shitty flash ad panels I'll be happy.

  • Crow T. Robot is so jealous...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      In the not-too-distant future --
      Next Sunday A.D. --
      There was a guy named Joel,
      Not too different from you or me.
      He worked at Mozilla Institute,
      Just another face in a red jumpsuit.
      He did a good job cleaning up the place,
      But his bosses didn't like him
      So they shot him into space.

      We'll make a cheesy browser,
      The worst we can find (la-la-la).
      He'll have to sit and browse the web,
      And we'll monitor his mind (la-la-la).
      Now keep in mind Joel can't control
      Where the programs begin or end (la-la-la)
      Because he used those s

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I see several complaints about the UI. Servo is a rendering engine, not a full browser. The UI included for it I'm sure is just a basic slapped-together UI just to get it functional enough to browse sites. Don't expect much from that UI.

    As for rendering incompletely, well it's an early build. Give it time. It already passes the Acid2 test and it will get better with time. None of the current major browsers passed Acid2 when it came out.

  • Code of conduct (Score:5, Interesting)

    by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Friday July 01, 2016 @01:29PM (#52427863)

    While I generally have a positive opinion historically of Netscape/Mozilla/Firefox I find them to be a little two faced at times.

    They claim prominently on their website to care about privacy yet make it extraordinarily difficult to configure the browser not to continuously call home. Even when you follow their expansive instructions it still doesn't stop it and the sheer volume of reasons or excuses implemented in the browser and enabled by default is comically mind boggling.

    Then there is the matter of "We follow the Rust Code of Conduct." which essentially codifies coddling, censorship and intolerance.

    It is nice to see them doing *something* about the ease of discovering exploits in their current codebase. If it works without downsides it will be awesome for users.

    • It has the Mozilla Public Licence, so none of that matters in the end. Ant downstream project fork may choose to ignore the code of conduct and remove the phone home calls. Default settings don't really matter to free libre open source code.

  • Just saying, as far as desktop linux is concerned I'm not sold on "smooth", "accelerated" and "animated" UI yet.
    The overhead as well as risks of something going wrong defeat it IMO, unless you have a fast CPU with built-in or recent well supported GPU.

    So I'm grudgingly waiting for Wayland of all things, hopefully with good drivers for most cards (nouveau drivers are excused, use them as best effort depending on your hardware/software), hoping it actually works at reducing CPU overhead too, leaving aside des

  • What's with the Dogecoin mascot? Did they really think nobody would notice? They can't even come up with their own damn mascot now?

    • That is more of a meme image than a Dogecoin image, although it is the same. I'm sure the real owners of said image are not aware of it's use here.

      • by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

        Well, the point still stands, there's still something else using that meme in the technology sector. And with a name like "servo" the best they could pick is that Shibe?

        • Servo makes me think of either motors or the robot's from the Sims universe. I don't understand the use of that graphic either. I'm sure it is just a placeholder for now.

  • Anonymous Coward (Score:2, Interesting)

    Hey, off topic perhaps, but has anyone notice that the number of Anonymous Coward postings on Slashdot taking pot shots at primarily open source projects seems to have dramatically increased? What's with all the snide comments of people who refuse to get an account? I've read one piece of useful analysis in 6 months on here posted under AC. The rest are just cracks.
  • Does Servo leak memory like a sieve like Firefox, causing one to relaunch one or two times a day or watch memory use climb to > 1 GB?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Firefox doesn't leak memory like a sieve, and hasn't since somewhere around version 7 before they managed to find a miracle cure for the shitty addons of that time. Now you really have to have bad luck to get it leaking memory like a sieve: shitty drivers, shitty addons/plugins, shitty third-party apps plugging into it, etc. Anyone claiming to the contrary has yet to prove it, though they like to bandy the claim about regardless.

    • by snadrus ( 930168 )

      I don't know if it's a leak, but taking it for a spin through 5 common homepages has this 1-tab Servo at 750mb Real memory and 3.5gb VM size.
      But it's also extremely buggy, so normal for a developer preview.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      haven't seen an actual leak in ages and i've been running minefield/nightly as my browser for a long time.

      fwiw i didn't even start to see problems until i got up to 1.6 GB with the mess of tabs i have. there are settings for minimizing and reducing the aggressive ram usage and ways to troubleshoot add-ons. good luck

  • I just skimmed the article, I didn't get the impression it will be replacing the engine in Firefox.

    Why run the two products? If Firefox is so fundamentally broken (?) then move development over to this new thing? If not, then continue to work on improving Firefox and implimenting the same features.

    Working on 2 seems counterproductive.

    • They're in fierce competition with the other browser companies. They can't just stop updating Firefox now because they think they will eventually have something better.
  • I'm not sure I want a browser that streams cheesy movies and I can't control when they begin or end.

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