Google and Mozilla don’t test iPhone browsers based on WebKit


There could be a big under-the-hood change coming to Chrome for iPhone.
Photo: Mac’s Ed Hardy / Cult

Google is tinkering with a version of its Chrome web browser for iPhone that doesn’t use the WebKit rendering engine. The same is true for Mozilla and Firefox browsers.

Releasing these is currently impossible due to Apple’s browser rules, but the iPhone maker may soon be forced to drop that restriction.

Chrome and Firefox browsers for iPhone may get a new rendering engine

Safari, Chrome, and Firefox each have fans, but many iPhone users may not know that all three web browsers use the same rendering engine. This means that their basic functionality is the same, with only secondary features to differentiate them.

The similarity isn’t because Google and Mozilla prefer Apple’s WebKit to Blink or Gecko. They don’t have a choice – an App Store rule states: “Web browsing apps must use the appropriate WebKit framework and WebKit JavaScript.”


So it’s great news that Google’s Chromium developers are working on a version of Chrome based on the Blink rendering engine. as seen by registerThe project is “experimental only, not a launch bug for a shippable product.”

And Mozilla is experimenting again with its rendering engine register,

Governments may loosen Apple’s grip on the App Store

The rule requiring all iPhone apps that access the web to use WebKit has been in place for many years. But this may soon go away.

A recent report from the US Department of Commerce is very critical of the rule. It notes that because of the WebKit requirement for the iPhone, “browsers that users recognize elsewhere on Android and desktop computers do not have the same functionality they do on those other platforms.”

Governments around the world have already started pressuring big tech companies to make changes. The European Union requires Apple to remove the Lightning port from the iPhone and allow third-party apps to be sideloaded. Given the current regulatory environment, the days when WebKit may be the only option are gone.

If so, Google apparently wants to be ready with a Blink-based version of its browser for the iPhone. And Mozilla will surely have an updated version of Firefox soon as well.

Source


Related News

Sending videos in HD comes to WhatsApp for Android in its beta

A few weeks ago, WhatsApp experimented with an option so that we can send higher quality photos and now it does the same with the videos. The adjustment is

Moon Knight: interview with May Calamawy (Layla El-Faouly)

A few days ago, thanks to the availability of Disney Plus, we were able to ask a few questions to May Calamawy, actress of Middle Eastern origins who plays

Scientists recreate CSI-style rooms with eye reflections

There's a saying that the eyes are the window to a person's soul, but eyes may be a mirror, according to a team of researchers at the University of Maryland,

Meet the Megapuff: A Versatile Solar Powered Light That Charges Your Phone and Folds Flat for Travel

A bigger sibling to the SolarPuff, the MegaPuff is designed for camping enthusiasts, trekkers, travelers or anyone living in an area with power outages. The

Finland to ban mobile phones in schools

Finland, previously known for its strong performance in the PISA school aptitude tests, is looking to reverse the current declining trend and promote a

Microsoft says Xbox has been losing the console war since 2001

As Microsoft settles with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over its $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard, the Xbox maker has admitted something it