From what I can gather, they don't intend on adding multi device capabilities for technical reasons. A big requirement for me is to be able to use both mobile and desktop without losing the history.
przmk
Well, Opera is also based on Chromium.
They plan a release for 2028. It's going to be a while before it can be used for everyday browsing.
Jump ship to what? Not like there's s lot of choices out there. You could always try LibreWolf.
Not really. Helix is closer to Kakoune which is based on the modal editing of Vim but reimagined a bit.
Works fine here on Fennec (Firefox android fork).
I'm pretty satisfied with Fluffy but the clients do still need a lot of work indeed.
There's a pretty simple reason. It's that developers don't have to spend the time to package for every single distro. I know I wouldn't, I'd just focus on packaging for the distro that I use and flatpak. Having flatpak also means that some less known distros start with a big amount of apps available from the get go with flatpak.
Organic Maps is really good but beware that it doesn't have lane assistance on highways which can prove to be dangerous imo.
Thanks for fixing the Wayland bug! I had to revert to 4.0 since 4.1 was completely unusable on my desktop.
That seems to be an Android app which requires the user to have it installed on their phone. No good for iOS either.
It also means that the rendering will potentially be different on each platform given they all use different native webviews (and there's no "native" webview on Linux but WebKit-gtk is the most widely used one)