OmniWeb 5.6 under Mac OS X 10.5.0 |
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Developer(s) | The Omni Group |
Initial release | 1995 |
Stable release | 5.11 (June 20, 2011 ) [±] |
Preview release | none (n/a) [±] |
Operating system | Mac OS X 10.4.8 or later |
Available in | English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Simplified Chinese, Swedish, |
Type | Web browser |
License | Proprietary (browser), LGPL (WebKit) |
Website | OmniWeb |
OmniWeb is a proprietary Internet web browser developed and marketed by The Omni Group. It is available exclusively for Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X operating system. Like many of its competitors in the Macintosh alternative browser market, Mozilla's Firefox and Camino, for instance, OmniWeb is available as a free download.
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OmniWeb was originally developed by Omni Group, and was released by Lighthouse Design for the NextStep platform on 17 March 1995[1] after only one month's development time.[2] As NextStep evolved into OpenStep and then Mac OS X, OmniWeb was updated to run on these platforms. OmniWeb also briefly ran on Microsoft Windows through the Yellow Box or the OpenStep frameworks. After Lighthouse Design was bought by Sun Microsystems, the Omni Group released the product themselves, from version 2.5 onwards. From version 4.0 onwards, OmniWeb has been developed solely for the Mac OS X platform.
OmniWeb is developed using the Cocoa API which allows it to take full advantage of Mac OS X features. It uses Quartz to produce images and smooth text, it will use multiple processors if available, and features an interface that makes use of Aqua UI features such as drawers, sheets and customizable toolbars.
OmniWeb originally employed its own proprietary HTML layout engine. However, the engine was not fully compatible with all of the most recent web standards, such as Cascading Style Sheets. In February 2003, the Omni Group adopted Apple's KHTML-based WebCore rendering engine,[3] which was created by Apple for its Safari browser.
On August 11, 2004, the Omni Group released version 5.0 of OmniWeb which included a number of new features. The most notable feature was an unusual implementation of tabbed browsing, in which the tabs were displayed vertically in a drawer on the side of the window (including optional thumbnail pictures of the pages.) Despite a certain amount of controversy over the merits of a tab drawer over a tab toolbar, the feature has persisted through the current version.
On September 6, 2006 version 5.5 was released. Major new features include the use of a custom version of WebKit instead of WebCore,[4] universal binary support, saving to web archive, support for user defined style sheets, a "Select Next Link" feature, FTP folder display, ad-blocking improvements, updated localizations, many other small changes and bug fixes.[5]
On February 24, 2009, Omni Group announced that OmniWeb would be made available for free, a change from its previous price of $14.95.[6]
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