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by vertex-four
2181 days ago
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Right, so the web was a wonderful place when IE6 was the only browser anyone developed for, and for the short period of time when Chrome was the only browser anyone developed for. This definitely didn't affect anyone's ability to choose a browser which met their needs, and definitely didn't result in half-baked and overly complex specifications being forced through the standards process by the only browser vendor with any power. If Google got their way, we'd be shipping modified LLVM bitcode to clients ("PNacl"), and every browser would be shipping some random fork of LLVM stuck in the past forever. If Microsoft got their way, GMail would be an ActiveX plugin. Gecko has massive improvements over Webkit/Blink, btw - WebRender is huge. |
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Having different organisations with different goals is what prevents these scenarios.
Otherwise the webkit blink thing wouldn't have been successfull.
Mozilla could also have forked blink and started replacing it with rust, and you would've gotten the same improvments.
Mozilla could have taken SQLite as a foundation, started a living spec, and immediately begun translating the codebase to rust. The effort would have been the same as for their half assed IndexedDB stuff, but the result would have been much better.
It doesn't matter where a code base comes from, it matters where it goes to. And when it comes to diversity of implementation the repelling forces of different ideas, viewpoints and aesthetics that normally result in dreaded project forks, work for the advantage of all in browsers.
Conways law: The software of projects reflects their social structure.