I agree. The recent EU ruling has atleast fixed that problem for EU citizens while the rest of the world catches up.
We were however discussing browsers in the context of desktops in the original thread. On MacOS, other engines are allowed.
Your issue is with apple’s draconian policy on ios, not webkit.
Further, two F1 cars using the same engine can perform vastly differently depending on how they’re tuned and how the car is built. While I do concur that it is criminal to not let us strap a jet engine to the f1 car, doesn’t mean that there aren’t differences between the currently legal cars beyond the coat of paint.
As I mentioned above, it’s quite snappier than safari and even Firefox. It’s clear that they’ve worked on performance.
That’s not my point. My point is that all iOS browsers are essentially the same browser because they’re forced to be.
I agree. The recent EU ruling has atleast fixed that problem for EU citizens while the rest of the world catches up.
We were however discussing browsers in the context of desktops in the original thread. On MacOS, other engines are allowed.
Your issue is with apple’s draconian policy on ios, not webkit.
Further, two F1 cars using the same engine can perform vastly differently depending on how they’re tuned and how the car is built. While I do concur that it is criminal to not let us strap a jet engine to the f1 car, doesn’t mean that there aren’t differences between the currently legal cars beyond the coat of paint.