xombrero
OpenBSD desktop running Xombrero 1.6.0
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Original author(s) | Marco Peereboom |
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Developer(s) | Marco Peereboom, Stevan Andjelkovic, Edd Barrett, Todd T. Fries, Raphael Graf, Michal Mazurek, Josh Rickmar, David Hill |
Initial release | May 30, 2012 |
Development status | Active |
Written in | C, JavaScript |
Operating system | Unix-like, Windows |
Engine | WebKit |
Platform | Cross-platform |
Size | 0.2 MB |
Available in | English |
Type | web browser |
License | ISC license |
Website |
Xombrero (formerly known as xxxterm) is an open-source web browser developed with a goal to be a lightweight and secure replacement for full featured browsers like Firefox.[1] The browser has found a niche among minimalist browsers for heavy keyboard users by balancing minimalism with usability.
Xombrero is based on GTK+ 3.[2]
Features[edit]
Xombrero is based on the Webkit engine[3] and provides an ability to control cookies, plug-ins and JavaScript policies on per-website basis. The user can define the whitelists of trusted websites for each of those security risks.[4][5]
Xombrero was designed for experienced command-line interface users, so it includes the features typically requested by such an audience: mouseless browsing, no URL prefetch, vi-like user interface and navigation (including command mode), plain text file configuration, and link hinting.[5][6][7]
User interface[edit]
Xombrero provides a command mode (designed after vi) for entering commands for the common tasks, including tabs (buffers) switching, entering URLs, following links and navigating through browser history and bookmarks.[3] The same functionality can be accessed with keyboard shortcuts.
By default Xombrero window contains two panels, providing the ordinary layout of a web browser window. The first one (on the top) – "fancy bar" – provides URL entry, backward, forward, stop and white-list toggle buttons and optional search string entry. Another panel (on the bottom) – "status bar" – reports the current URL (or page title), zoom level and position in page. With these panels enabled and a mouse attached, the user may operate Xombrero like Firefox or Midori.
History[edit]
The development of the browser began in February 2010 under the name "xxxterm" by several OpenBSD users specifically for that operating system.[4][8] Initially the releases of the browsers were identified by CVS revision numbers, though more common "X.Y.Z" version numbering scheme was introduced as development moved to Git.[9]
In the release announcement for version 1.11.2, Peereboom revealed the plan to rename xxxterm to Xombrero, though an emergency release under the old name happened later the same day.[10][11] Later it was revealed that the version numbers for the browser under the new name would start again from 1.0.[12]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Peereboom, Marco (2011-11-04), Why does the world need yet another browser?, retrieved 2011-11-27
- ^ "Xombrero Major Features".
- ^ a b Vervloesem, Koen (2011-12-15), "Xxxterm: Surfing like a Vim pro", LWN.net, retrieved 2011-12-16
- ^ a b Czarkoff, Dmitrij (2011-12-05), "Introduction: xxxterm Web Browser", OSNews, retrieved 2011-12-05
- ^ a b Rapenne, Charles (2012-10-08), "Browse the Internet Differently", BSD Magazine, 6 (10), ISSN 1898-9144
- ^ Uemura, Mark T. (2010-09-07), "[c2k10] Interview with Marco Peereboom (marco@) Part 8", OpenBSD Journal, retrieved 2011-11-27
- ^ Bělka, Jiří (2010-02-25), "XXXTerm: nový prohlížeč postavený na jádře WebKit" [XXXTerm: new browser built on WebKit engine], Root.cz (in Czech), retrieved 2011-12-07
- ^ "xxxterm: Commit 4b6598", xxxterm git tree, 2010-02-10, retrieved 2012-06-26
- ^ Peereboom, Marco (2011-10-12), xxxterm 1.6.1 released!, retrieved 2011-10-12
- ^ Peereboom, Marco (2012-03-01), xxxterm 1.11.2 released!, retrieved 2012-06-26
- ^ Peereboom, Marco (2012-03-01), xxxterm 1.11.3 released!, retrieved 2012-06-26
- ^ Peereboom, Marco (2012-05-17), Xombrero is here!, retrieved 2012-06-05