We have always tried to make the web do more. Whatever problems you have with today's web are nothing compared to the horror that was Macromedia Shockwave, Adobe Flash, and Java plugins.
Permacomputing
Computing to support life on Earth
Computing in the age of climate crisis is often wasteful and adds nothing useful to our real life communities. Here we try to find out how to change that.
Definition and purpose of permacomputing: http://viznut.fi/files/texts-en/permacomputing.html
XMPP chat: https://movim.slrpnk.net/chat/lowtech%40chat.disroot.org/room
Sister community over at lemmy.sdf.org: !permacomputing@lemmy.sdf.org
There's also a wiki: https://permacomputing.net/
Website: http://wiki.xxiivv.com/site/permacomputing.html
Been wanting to look at some of these. Any recommendations or preferences you're willing to share?
not a lot of experience (keep thinking about it but then get distracted – and I need my uBlock Origin) …
- vimb if you’re a vim fan (and I think there’s an equivalent for EXWM?)
- w3m and Lynx are the text based browsers – and you get to find out how accessible-hostile modern web pages are :-/
- surf, Min, and qute are the graphical options – really seems to be personal preference
- ie. if you’re a dwm/dmenu fan, then you’re going for surf
Thanks for the reply. I thought those were all terminal browsers. Been wanting to try them just for the hell of it and to see what the experience is like.
It doesn't look like there's been any activity in 7 years, but your post reminded me of Uzbl, a set of browser components designed to apply the Unix philosophy
There's that new browser being done by a group who's also doing a whole new OS. It looks promising as it's somewhat W3 compliant. It probably won't every be fully compliant but I don't think the developers intend it to be.
The Serenity OS Project? I've been following that as well. It seems like they've built a really vibrant and healthy community, and their browser, Ladybird, is really coming along.
yessss thats the one!