X-Git-Url: http://git.nikiroo.be/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=test%2Fexpected%2FSLASHDOT%2F0102637536.header;fp=test%2Fexpected%2FSLASHDOT%2F0102637536.header;h=83015727406f7e59a73d02de8f310ba7e209b7f5;hb=299a08f325f3de71e191b17b16a120d1714e3d7c;hp=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hpb=1aaa6ba3686a5a14f2957b6b8d02ffc0903f6832;p=gofetch.git diff --git a/test/expected/SLASHDOT/0102637536.header b/test/expected/SLASHDOT/0102637536.header new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8301572 --- /dev/null +++ b/test/expected/SLASHDOT/0102637536.header @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +0Tor Browser Gets a Redesign, Switches To New Firefox Quantum Engine (zdnet.com) null/SLASHDOT/0102637536 70 +i Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:30PM (msmash) +i from the for-the-record dept. +i +i The Tor Browser has rolled out a new interface with the +i release of v8. From a report: The Tor Browser has always been +i based on the Firefox codebase, but it lagged behind a few +i releases. Mozilla rolled out a major overhaul of the Firefox +i codebase in November 2017, with the release of Firefox 57, the +i first release in the Firefox Quantum series. Firefox Quantum +i came with a new page rendering engine, a new add-ons API, and +i a new user interface called the Photon UI. Because these were +i major, code-breaking changes, it took the smaller Tor team +i some time to integrate all of them into the Tor Browser +i codebase and make sure everything worked as intended. The new +i Tor Browser 8, released yesterday, is now in sync with the +i most recent version of Firefox, the Quantum release, and also +i supports all of its features. This means the Tor Browser now +i uses the same modern Photon UI that current Firefox versions +i use, it supports the same speed-optimized page rendering +i engine and has also dropped support for the old XUL-based +i add-ons system for the new WebExtensions API system used by +i Chrome, Opera, Vivaldi, Brave, and the rest of the Chromium +i browsers. +i