Vimb
Vimb is a fast and lightweight vim-like web browser based on the WebKit web browser engine and the GTK toolkit. Vimb is modal like the great vim editor and also easily configurable during runtime. Vimb is mostly keyboard-driven and does not distract you from your daily work. If you are familiar with vim or have some experience with pentadactyl the use of Vimb would be a breeze, if not we missed our target. Enable visualization of some runtime settings. Allows controlling the website access to the notification API. it’s modal like Vim. Vim-like keybindings, assignable for each browser mode. Nearly every configuration can be changed at runtime with Vim-like set syntax. History for ex-commands, search queries, URLs. Completions for commands, URLs, bookmarked URLs, variable names of settings, search-queries. Hinting marks links, form fields, and other clickable elements to be clicked, opened or inspected. SSL validation against the ca-certificate file. user-defined URL shortcuts.
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Firefox Developer Edition
Welcome to your new favorite browser. Get the latest features, fast performance, and the development tools you need to build for the open web. All the latest developer tools in beta, plus experimental features like the multi-line console editor and WebSocket inspector. A separate profile and path so you can easily run it alongside release or beta Firefox. Preferences tailored for web developers, browser and remote debugging are enabled by default, as are the dark theme and developer toolbar button. Firefox DevTools now grays out CSS declarations that don’t have an effect on the page. When you hover over the info icon, you’ll see a useful message about why the CSS is not being applied, including a hint about how to fix the problem. The new Firefox DevTools are powerful, flexible, and best of all, hackable. This includes a best-in-class JavaScript debugger, which can target multiple browsers and is built in React and Redux.
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Min
A smarter web browser. Tabs in Min take up less space, giving you more room to browse the web. Pages you haven’t looked at in a while fade out, letting you see what’s important, and Focus Mode hides your other tabs to prevent you from getting distracted. See quick definitions and answers with information from DuckDuckGo, including Wikipedia entries and more. Jump to any site quickly with fuzzy search. Or search through the full text of every page you've visited, even if you don't remember the title. Tabs in Min open next to the current tab, so you’ll never lose your place. When you have too many tabs, you can easily split them into groups to help you stay organized. Min stops ads and trackers, so you can browse faster without being tracked. And when you’re using a slow or expensive internet connection, it lets you block scripts and images, so pages load faster and use less data.
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WebPositive
WebPositive, or Web+ for short, is Haiku's native web browser. One part of its name is a tip of the hat to BeOS' simple NetPositive, the other points to its modern foundation: the WebKit. This open source HTML rendering library is at the heart of other mainstream browsers as well, like Safari of Mac OS X and Google's Chrome. By using the ever evolving WebKit, Web+ will be able to keep up with new web technologies. WebPositive's interface is pretty straight forward: Under a menu bar is another bar with buttons to navigate to the previous and next sites in your browsing history, to stop the loading of a page and (optionally) a button to jump to your starting page. At the bottom of the window is a status bar, showing the URL of the site being loaded or of the link the mouse pointer is hovering over. While a page is being loaded, a progress bar appears to the right.
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