Nick - here's something to ponder to make us look at the situation in another direction.
I think the individual developer of TenFourFox who simply can't keep up said it best about part of the reason he is stopping development, and why simple individually developed browsers are a lost cause (but not really - see my comments)
"However, JavaScript is what probably killed TenFourFox quickest. For better or for worse, web browsers' primary role is no longer to view documents; it is to view applications that, by sheer coincidence, sometimes resemble documents."
About half-way down this page:
https://tenfourfox.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-end-of-tenfourfox-and-what-ive.htmlEXACTLY! So no bank is going to recognize Dillo, Fifth, Midori, NetSurf and the like. Their javascript engines have no hope of keeping up with what was once an interactive document viewer, but pages full of javascript applications. Most online pages elsewhere are like this too making them the small independent browser a very nich application.
BUT - what can we do? What I'd say to the dev of the Fifth browser for example, is to totally forget about online access. Keep improving Fifth to be an excellent OFFLINE html document viewer. Heck, now that Curaga cured my resolution problem, even Dillo serves a purpose for those willing to perfect their .dillorc
Interestingly enough, Slitaz uses Midori as a default browser, and of course these days is more or less in the same useless online boat as all the rest. But it is still VERY useful for html documents. Heck, they even created an offline spreadsheet with it!
I guess the point here is that while I'm forced to use browsers online that are written to deal with javascript engines which the ONline world has become, there is still a great need for those of us who value a good HTML reader tool!
And of course, doing html markup on one's own can be a very creative way to express yourself and learn something, but the push from the corporate browsers have that big push to make kids learn javascript, json, yadda yadda and push good quality html markup to the side as old fashioned - you *have* to go online kid! Yeah, right - but no.
So that's my dream - Fifth cleaned up, perhaps Midori, and don't worry at all about javascript. Rip that crap out. There's no hope of keeping up with javascript engines, so fuggedabout it, and make Fifth or whatever a rockin HTML viewer for TC. Wish I had the chops to do that myself.
So going off topic, but we have a problem - but a possible solution - to leave the online world to itself, but not abandon a browser's main purpose - to view html documents. Heck, how many know about using a url of "file://" these days?