
Codeship
Jenkins
CircleCI
Travis CI
Bamboo
TeamCity
Azure DevOps
Bitrise
Servo
WebKit
Surf
NetSurf
LocalXpose
Blink Rendering Engine
LibreWolf
ngrok
CodeshipBased on our record, Servo seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 70 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Servo [0] is EU funded via NLnet. You can build a browser from that. [0] https://servo.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 29 days ago
For those unfamiliar, Servo is a web rendering engine originally started at Mozilla Research. It's written in Rust from the ground up and was designed to take advantage of modern hardware through parallelism โ layout, styling, and painting can happen concurrently across CPU cores. Many of Servo's innovations actually made their way into Firefox over the years (Stylo, WebRender). - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
Firefox was special in that Mozilla created Rust to build Servo and then backported parts of Servo to Firefox and ultimately stopped building Servo. Thankfully Servo has picked up speed again and if one wants a Rust based browser engine what better choice than the one the language was built to enable? https://servo.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
So things like media players from the native platform wouldn't be required. in-app browsers can use something like [servo](https://servo.org/) map-gis widgets can use something like [galileo](https://github.com/galileo-map/galileo). - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
I very much dislike that they arent available for linux. Which means I havent tested them; I also dont see a need for them. I dont want or use AI in the browser. Brave has had Leo for ages now. Qwen3 14b in the cloud is a fine model, no thanks though. I very much prefer my local llama private models for privacy. None of these ai browsers let you go local; but even if they did, I doubt id use it anyway. What the... - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
Jenkins - Jenkins is an open-source continuous integration server with 300+ plugins to support all kinds of software development
WebKit - WebKit is a layout engine designed to allow web browsers to render web pages.
CircleCI - CircleCI gives web developers powerful Continuous Integration and Deployment with easy setup and maintenance.
Surf - A simple web browser based on WebKit2/GTK+
Travis CI - Simple, flexible, trustworthy CI/CD tools. Join hundreds of thousands who define tests and deployments in minutes, then scale up simply with parallel or multi-environment builds using Travis CIโs precision syntaxโall with the developer in mind.
NetSurf - Small as a mouse, fast as a cheetah and available for free.