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by ghego1
1707 days ago
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IMHO the fact that we are moving towards one reliable engine is not a bad thing per se. I think it's a step in the right direction, as long as those contributing to chromium do have a saying in how it should move forward. As a full stack developer I've battled so many times with weird implementations or unexpected behaviors across browsers that knowing that I can assume that the user will be on chromium is just piece of mind. As a counter argument I don't think that monopolization of internet standards will be a risk. As long as chromium stays open source and anyone can fork it, I think that the risk of monopolization on internet is not on how web pages are rendered, but rather on how users reach content. I think the latter is the real problem and I don't think that battling chromium is any good at that regard. Money would be much better spent on developing new ways to allow discoverability of content beyond Google, walled app stores and alikes. |
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> As a full stack developer I've battled so many times with weird implementations or unexpected behaviors across browsers that knowing that I can assume that the user will be on chromium is just piece of mind.
If webkit/blink is the only game in town, web standards will become standards only in name. The weird implementations and unexpected behaviors you see on webkit/blink will become the de-facto standards.
Why would webkit/blink developers (or the companies who fund them) bother with the inconvenience of the process of standardization and involve multiple stakeholders and collect feedback from users when they can just ship new web features or break existing ones when it's in their best interest?
You can already see this playing out with webkit and Apple's neutering of web capabilities on iOS in the interest of keeping it from becoming a threat to its walled garden.
With all that said, we're already on the collision course to this world, given the prevailing sentiment in the web community is to build only for webkit/blink and leave other engines as an afterthought due to their low market share, resulting in a vicious self-reinforcing cycle. Like the OP I'm not sure if there's much that can be done about it at this point.