One day, two new rendering engines announced, three browsers involved!
When you wait ages for a bus, and then three come along at once, it's not a coincidence: it's a side-effect of queuing and traffic lights.
But what about when three browser vendors make announcements on the same day?
Robust competition? Serendipity? Coincidence? Or a bit of all of them?
Google announced Blink, a fork of the Webkit browser that aims to build a smaller and safer rendering platform based on what Google is unashamedly referring to as a "healthier codebase."
Opera, which is retiring its own rendering engine Presto and replacing its browser core with Chromium, the open-source flavour of Google Chrome, indirectly announced its commitment to the Blink-based flavour of Chromium.
And Mozilla announced Servo, or, more accurately, announced an ARM port of its experimental browser engine Servo, written in its new and experimental programming language Rust.
Pour contrer l'espionnage mis en place par la NSA et son outil Prism, un chercheur Français lance Peersm : des échanges de fichiers de manière anonyme. Aymeric Vitte est un chercheur en informatique, ancien élève ingénieur à Telecom Paris, ce natif d'Aix en Provence, a travaillé pour Alcatel. Spécialiste du GSM, il a géré un grand nombre de projets en Amérique du Sud. Il a mis en place, par exemple, le premier réseau GSM au Brésil et travaillé sur des projets Satellite comme GlobalStar. Aujourd'hui il développe des solutions informatiques pour les entreprises et les professions libérales.