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[gofetch.git] / test / expected / SLASHDOT / 0102637536.header.html
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1<!DOCTYPE html>
2<html>
3<head>
4 <meta http-equiv='content-type' content='text/html; charset=utf-8'>
5 <meta name='viewport' content='width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0'>
6 <style type='text/css'>
7 body { margin: 1em 15%; }
8 </style>
9</head>
10<body>
11<div class='story-header'>
12 <h2><a href='0102637536.html'>Tor Browser Gets a Redesign, Switches To New Firefox Quantum Engine (zdnet.com)</a></h2>
13 <div class='details'>(Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:30PM (msmash)
14from the for-the-record dept.)</div>
15 <br/>
16 <div class='content' style='text-align: justify'>
17 The Tor Browser has rolled out a new interface with the release of v8. From a report: The Tor Browser has always been based on the Firefox codebase, but it lagged behind a few releases. Mozilla rolled out a major overhaul of the Firefox codebase in November 2017, with the release of Firefox 57, the first release in the Firefox Quantum series. Firefox Quantum came with a new page rendering engine, a new add-ons API, and a new user interface called the Photon UI. Because these were major, code-breaking changes, it took the smaller Tor team some time to integrate all of them into the Tor Browser codebase and make sure everything worked as intended. The new Tor Browser 8, released yesterday, is now in sync with the most recent version of Firefox, the Quantum release, and also supports all of its features. This means the Tor Browser now uses the same modern Photon UI that current Firefox versions use, it supports the same speed-optimized page rendering engine and has also dropped support for the old XUL-based add-ons system for the new WebExtensions API system used by Chrome, Opera, Vivaldi, Brave, and the rest of the Chromium browsers.
18 </div>
19<hr/>
20</div>
21</body>