I remember using Dillo on a Compaq iPaq with Linux installed. No Dillo screen shots, but plenty of information about apps for Linux on the iPaq 3765 here:
We had about 10-15 years or so where the web wasn’t so complex and fast moving that a browser needed constant updates for things to work. Now browsers are more complex that entire operating systems and anything older than a few years just won’t work and publishers think that’s ok. I remember as late as 2008 verifying websites in Lynx (or elinks or links2) to ensure screen readers and low end devices would have a reasonable experience.
Now anything older than a few years is garbage that can be abandoned and websites have no problem using GBs of RAM. What a wasteful, fickle industry software is.
One of my pals was back then writing his thesis around web browsers, modern technologies and components that at that time were considered to be crucial in the upcoming years. He included Acid tests and browser market share; also covered Internet Explorer dominance and Firefox that managed to break it. All of this in context of standard computers - smartphones were about to become a thing.
We went a full circle and whole world nearly runs on a single browser engine. And beyond that if we consider the portability of modern software.
Yet, this Blink-Chromium monoculture is not a matter of concern to competition regulators. Whether because "it is what it is" or perhaps because of some deep shenanigans we don't see, it's terrifying because we lost choice and we're dependable on Google whims. All the hope lies in these small projects that bloomed around, and perhaps even in Firefox - if Mozilla will be ready to take own examination of conscience. But even so, wind of change might be not that strong.
Was just going to ask if anyone remembered the name of this one. It was amazing! 15 year old me felt very important/futuristic syncing the news before school in the morning and reading during school break!
Edit: after looking it up with plucker as a starting point I think the one I actually used was AvantGo, same idea though I think.
I worked on a real estate app. We added mobile support by generating a static website from the database, including listing previews and stuff. Realtors were amazed that they could have the entire database that looked like a full website. That was fully offline. Plucker made it possible
It's hardly a problem because most web traffic doesn't need to be encrypted. Just banking, shopping, a few other things like healthcare and health care.
You'd be right if ISPs didn't do mass DPI and modification of pages to inject their own ads and trackers. They also routinely hijack and intercept DNS responses. They absolutely cannot be trusted carrying unencrypted traffic.
The point is that https-everywhere people have successfully pushed the majority of the sites that could previously be served over vanilla http to require https anyway. Now if you're on and old device you need an https proxy or else you're out of luck.
The AlphaSmart dana had its own widescreen browser on PalmOS. Modern sites bring it to its knees, but it's a nicer experience than a smaller PDA screen when it works.
bdickason | a day ago
9dev | a day ago
TeaVMFan | a day ago
https://www.frequal.com/ipaq/index.html
boguscoder | a day ago
jonhohle | a day ago
Now anything older than a few years is garbage that can be abandoned and websites have no problem using GBs of RAM. What a wasteful, fickle industry software is.
pndy | a day ago
We went a full circle and whole world nearly runs on a single browser engine. And beyond that if we consider the portability of modern software.
Yet, this Blink-Chromium monoculture is not a matter of concern to competition regulators. Whether because "it is what it is" or perhaps because of some deep shenanigans we don't see, it's terrifying because we lost choice and we're dependable on Google whims. All the hope lies in these small projects that bloomed around, and perhaps even in Firefox - if Mozilla will be ready to take own examination of conscience. But even so, wind of change might be not that strong.
lxgr | a day ago
You could enqueue websites to download and compress from a PC during each HotSync operation and then read them offline on the PDA.
phreeza | a day ago
Edit: after looking it up with plucker as a starting point I think the one I actually used was AvantGo, same idea though I think.
tarasglek | 16 hours ago
AIcanbiteme | a day ago
[OP] robin_reala | a day ago
AIcanbiteme | a day ago
[OP] robin_reala | a day ago
giantrobot | a day ago
RodgerTheGreat | a day ago
tekne | 22 hours ago
b) it is literally trivial to buy a tiny RISC chip for a dew cents that can handle HTTPS just fine
classichasclass | a day ago
xacky | 10 hours ago
tlhunter | 9 hours ago