I think it is from different opt/app-name/ folder and app-name. fixed path to /opt/fennec, hope it will help
Also uploaded fixed version of nightly package (last one was a bit broken due build error)
I know it has been discussed throughout the thread, but why does Nokia themselves help develop flash for our beloved N9 but stick it on Firefox/Fennec?!
Why not for the stock browser, at a slight loss as to why they did this but I guess I can live with it. Just curious tbh.
I know it has been discussed throughout the thread, but why does Nokia themselves help develop flash for our beloved N9 but stick it on Firefox/Fennec?!
Why not for the stock browser, at a slight loss as to why they did this but I guess I can live with it. Just curious tbh.
Stock browser, based on Old Webkit2 branch which has not very good plugins support (does not have)
Also it very far from certification quality with that branch... but I guess it would not be hard to add that support by hacking: http://gitorious.org/+qtwebkit-webki...it-webkit2-dev ...
Firefox/Fennec has pretty much stable plugins-backend support, also it multi-process out of the box, which helps to not kill Browser when flash crashes
Stock browser, based on Old Webkit2 branch which has not very good plugins support (does not have)
Also it very far from certification quality with that branch... but I guess it would not be hard to add that support by hacking: http://gitorious.org/+qtwebkit-webki...it-webkit2-dev ...
Firefox/Fennec has pretty much stable plugins-backend support, also it multi-process out of the box, which helps to not kill Browser when flash crashes
Thanks for that, clarifies things for me
Shame Nokia couldn't sort the stock browser and make it a bit more plugin friendly, maybe use a newer version of WebKit and technically its wouldn't be hacking if Nokia did it themselves, which is what I am still kinda hoping they will do at some point.
Or Fennec/Firefox will catch up speed wise and I will never use that lightweight tabless browser that Nokia provided us with :P
Or Fennec/Firefox will catch up speed wise and I will never use that lightweight tabless browser that Nokia provided us with :P
I've made simple IPC embedding API, which allow to embed gecko in the similar way as Webkit2 https://wiki.mozilla.org/Embedding/IPCLiteAPI
With that I have very high responsiveness and performance (60FPS for everything without lags using simple QML view)
But main problem is that we need to build Qt native or QML UI for that, if that is done, then we could get native mobile browser which is as fast as stock browser, and would have better support from engine side (keeping mozilla based stuff in sync with upstream is much easier)