Windows News and info 15th Anniversary 2009-2024

Social Media - Search Engines - Browsers => Browsers: Google Chrome | Opera | Safari | Firefox => Topic started by: riso on September 15, 2009, 08:20:36 AM

Title: Midori - a lightweight Webkit-based browser - lands on Windows
Post by: riso on September 15, 2009, 08:20:36 AM
(http://www.blogcdn.com/www.downloadsquad.com/media/2009/09/midori-vawegv4gb3-1252928805.jpg)
While I like Google Chrome, there are plenty of Webkit-based alternatives out there. One I enjoy using on my Crunchbang system is Midori - an efficient and highly customizable browser that made the jump to Windows just a couple months ago. It's important to note that Midori is still in the alpha stage - recently hitting 0.1.10 on Linux and the Windows binaries now on 0.1.8. If you're after absolute stability, Midori might not be your thing. I experienced the occasional crash while playing with the interface, though it was plenty stable while surfing and utilizing web apps. With the same six tabs open in Midori and Firefox 3.5.3 - including GMail and two javascript-heavy web apps - Midori used about 80Mb less memory, peaking at about 99Mb total. The browser doesn't quite have Chrome's rendering zippiness, but it's still respectably fast. So what else can Midori do? Apart from the expected features like tabbed browsing, and bookmark and history management it's got support for Userscripts, Userstyles, the Netscape plugin architecture, and extensions. Search options can be customized as well and you can assign a token (i.e. preface with g to search with google).


Want to learn more about Midori yourself? Check the FAQ over at XFCE.org or download it yourself and take Midori for a spin!


Tags: linux, midori, web browsers, WebBrowsers, webkit, xfce



A clarification from Pasty,
The Midori browser has absolutely no relation to the Midori experiment inside Microsoft.  
The name is just a coincidence, as it translates into 'cloud' in Japanese.