When considering browsers, people generally think of Chrome, Firefox, and Edge, but the real power lies in the engines that run underneath these browsers. The engines ultimately dictate how your ...
Apple is further opening up iOS to alternative browsers and browser engines, as part of Cupertino’s plan to comply with the European Union’s Digital Markets Act. In iOS 17.4 — launched Thursday as a ...
Web browsers are among the most essential pieces of software we use daily, yet we often take them for granted. Most users settle for whatever default ships with their devices -- and that's a mistake.
In response to the Digital Markets Act (DMA), Apple announced last week that it would allow “alternative” browser engines on the iPhone in Europe. Google’s head of Chrome today shared their thoughts ...
With the iOS 17.4 update, Apple is making sweeping changes to iOS in order to comply with the Digital Markets Act in the European Union. Apple is opening up the browser engine, and giving users more ...
The Open Web Advocacy group claims that despite claiming to allow rival browser engines on the iPhone, Apple has made it impossible for developers to create them. At the end of June 2025, the European ...
What if the web wasn’t ruled by a single engine, a single vision, or a single company? In a world where Chromium-based browsers dominate over 70% of the market, Andreas Kling’s keynote presentation on ...
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