When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Google Cast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Cast

    Google Cast is a proprietary protocol developed by Google for playing locally stored or Internet-streamed audiovisual content on a compatible consumer device. The protocol is used to initiate and control playback of content on digital media players, high-definition televisions, and home audio systems using a mobile device, personal computer, or smart speaker.

  3. Miracast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracast

    Miracast is utilised in many devices and is used or branded under various names by different manufacturers, including Smart View (by Samsung), [3] [4] SmartShare (by LG), screen mirroring (by Sony), Cast (in Windows 11) and Connect (in Windows 10), wireless display and screen casting.

  4. Chromecast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromecast

    A first-generation Chromecast plugged into the HDMI port of a TV. All Chromecast devices offer at least two methods to stream content: the first employs mobile and web apps that include the Google Cast technology; the second, which applies to video models, allows mirroring of content from the web browser Google Chrome running on a personal computer, as well as content displayed on some Android ...

  5. Firefox for Android - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefox_for_Android

    Firefox Lite – a lightweight version of Firefox for Android. Firefox – Mozilla's web browser for desktop computers; Google Chrome for Android – the default web browser for most Android devices; Minimo – a previous project to create a mobile Mozilla browser; MicroB – a Mozilla-based mobile browser for Nokia Maemo; Mobile browser

  6. Comparison of Firefox OS devices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Firefox_OS...

    Firefox OS is an operating system for use on certain specific mobile devices. This page lists and compares hardware devices that are supplied with a Firefox OS operating system. This page lists and compares hardware devices that are supplied with a Firefox OS operating system.

  7. Template:Firefox for Android release compatibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Firefox_for...

    Prior to version 96 [8] it used version numbers that do not correspond to any of the other Firefox versions. Those share a core component, the Gecko rendering engine, and track its version numbers, whereas the version for the iOS operating system uses the operating system's rendering engine (WebKit), rather than Mozilla's (Gecko).

  8. Firefox Focus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefox_Focus

    Firefox Focus is a free and open-source privacy-focused mobile browser by Mozilla, based on Firefox.It is available for Android [4] [5] and iOS smartphones and tablets. [6] [7] Its predecessor, Focus by Firefox, was released in December 2015 as a tracker-blocking application which worked only in conjunction with the Safari mobile browser on iOS.

  9. Firefox OS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefox_OS

    On July 25, 2011, Andreas Gal, Director of Research at Mozilla Corporation, announced the "Boot to Gecko" Project (B2G) on the mozilla.dev.platform mailing list. [9] The project proposal was to "pursue the goal of building a complete, standalone operating system for the open web" in order to "find the gaps that keep web developers from being able to build apps that are – in every way – the ...