Dillo

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Dillo
The Main Page of Wikipedia as seen in Dillo 0.8.4
Dillo 0.8.4 showing Wikipedia
Stable release: 0.8.6  (April 26, 2006) [+/-]
Preview release: none  (n/a) [+/-]
OS: Unix, Linux, BSD, Mac OS X, Windows
Use: Web browser
License: GPL
Website: www.dillo.org

Dillo is a small (~350 kB), fast, free software minimalistic multi-platform web browser written in C using the GTK+ graphical toolkit which was first released in December 1999.

It is particularly suitable for older or smaller computers and embedded systems. In addition to its small size, Dillo is highly secure — cookies are disabled by default, for instance. Dillo is available for most POSIX-compliant Unix platforms, including GNU/Linux, BSD and Mac OS X. As of December 2006, the current version is 0.8.6. Due to its small size Dillo is also the browser of choice for many space-conscious Linux distributions including Damn Small Linux and Feather Linux.

Dillo, as of release 0.8.6, has no support for character encoding beyond Latin-1, for CSS, JavaScript, or Java. Support for frames is very limited: Dillo makes each frame a link, then shows the NOFRAMES portion of the page in question. There is no support for tabs and encoding selection in official releases, but these features are available in third-party patches. Third-party patches also exist to support antialiasing of text and non-Latin characters.

Currently, development efforts are focused not on adding more features, but in porting Dillo from the GTK+ toolkit to the FLTK2 graphics toolkit and improving the prototypical support for SSL, as well as working on a framework to allow plugins to be easily written and included, as in Firefox.

Dillo has been ported from Unix to many platforms, including Windows.
Dillo has been ported from Unix to many platforms, including Windows.

In these days the FLTK2 port is quite complete and mature but not released in public because of long time lack of funds, which are important for further Dillo development. According to main developer Jorge Arellano Cid there's not enough support from companies, which are using Dillo in theirs products (i.e. in embedded systems). Jorge claimed that Dillo won't be released without support from companies.

From 30th of August 2006 there's an effort to find corporate funders: Campaign to help Dillo survive

On 25 February 2007 the project was declared frozen until funding or new developers appeared.

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