Yup, the split is really Blink+WebKit. Gecko marketshare is tiny these days.
What's interesting is seeing a few non-Apple WebKit browsers pop up, like Orion (Kagi) and Epiphany.
Call me cynical, but I don't see Ladybird or Servo do much beyond making a splash. Browser engines take an incredible amount of dev hours to maintain. Ladybird is hot now, but what about in a decade? Hype doesn't last that long and at that point the money and a chunk of the dev interest will have dried up.
Blink and WebKit both have massive corporations championing them, so those engines do not run that risk.
> Blink and WebKit both have massive corporations championing them, so those engines do not run that risk.
There's always risk. IE/Edge also had a massive corporation championing it, until it didn't. The US DOJ also appears to be considering actively prevent Google from backing Chrome. Which could also do for Firefox given that it's revenue comes from the same source.
No doubt that wouldn't completely kill those engine given our reliance on them, but in those kind of circumstances we might welcome the existence of some simpler engines that are cheaper/easier to maintain.
I don't see the current US DoJ doing anything that harms Big Business and doesn't cater to the petulant whims of the current Presidential Administration.
What's interesting is seeing a few non-Apple WebKit browsers pop up, like Orion (Kagi) and Epiphany.
Call me cynical, but I don't see Ladybird or Servo do much beyond making a splash. Browser engines take an incredible amount of dev hours to maintain. Ladybird is hot now, but what about in a decade? Hype doesn't last that long and at that point the money and a chunk of the dev interest will have dried up.
Blink and WebKit both have massive corporations championing them, so those engines do not run that risk.