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Lynx was a product of the Distributed Computing Group within Academic Computing Services of the University of Kansas. [7] [8] It was initially developed in 1992 by a team of students and staff at the university (Lou Montulli, Michael Grobe and Charles Rezac) as a hypertext browser used solely to distribute campus information as part of a Campus-Wide Information System [9] and for browsing the ...
Four of the browsers compared—Lynx, w3m, Links, and ELinks—are designed for text mode, and can function in a terminal emulator. Eww is limited to working within Emacs. Links 2 has both a text-based user interface and a graphical user interface. w3m is, in addition to being a web browser, also a terminal pager. [6]
Web-based SSH is the provision of Secure Shell (SSH) access through a web browser. SSH is a secure network protocol that is commonly used to remotely control servers, network devices, and other devices. With web-based SSH, users can access and manage these devices using a standard web browser, without the need to install any additional software.
w3m runs in terminal emulator programs such as xterm and GNOME Terminal. [10] The browser has tabbed browsing, right click menus, and image support, [10] along with support for tables and frames. It also functions as a terminal pager. [6] It can be navigated solely using the keyboard or with the mouse.
The Browsh web browser represents web pages as text and can be run either from a terminal client environment or from a web browser. [4] As of August 2018 the web browser client remains less developed. [4] It has been developed since 23 April 2016. [2] It uses Go as a core part of its implementation. [4]
Links is a free software text and graphical web browser with a pull-down menu system. [2] It renders complex pages, has partial HTML 4.0 support (including tables, frames , [ 3 ] and support for UTF-8 ), supports color and monochrome terminals, and allows horizontal scrolling.
Gecko is primarily used in web browsers, the earliest being Netscape 6 and Mozilla Suite (later renamed SeaMonkey). It is also used in other Mozilla web browser derivatives such as Firefox and Firefox for mobile and the implementation of the Internet Explorer-clone that is part of Wine. [25] Mozilla also uses it in their Thunderbird email-client.
Nick Veitch from TechRadar included Midori 0.2.2 in his 2010 list of the eight best web browsers for Linux. At that time he rated it as "5/10" and concluded, "while it does perform reasonably well all-round, there is no compelling reason to choose this browser over the default Gnome browser, Epiphany, or indeed any of the bigger boys".