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Willow quantum chip demonstrates verifiable quantum advantage on hardware

https://blog.google/technology/research/quantum-echoes-willow-verifiable-quantum-advantage/
292•AbhishekParmar•5h ago•137 comments

JMAP for Calendars, Contacts and Files Now in Stalwart

https://stalw.art/blog/jmap-collaboration/
132•StalwartLabs•2h ago•38 comments

Mass Assignment Vulnerability Exposes Max Verstappen Passport and F1 Drivers PII

https://ian.sh/fia
60•galnagli•2h ago•9 comments

HP SitePrint

https://www.hp.com/us-en/printers/site-print/layout-robot.html
112•gjvc•3h ago•71 comments

Scripts I wrote that I use all the time

https://evanhahn.com/scripts-i-wrote-that-i-use-all-the-time/
217•speckx•5h ago•61 comments

Ovi

https://github.com/character-ai/Ovi
13•montyanderson•42m ago•0 comments

Meta is axing 600 roles across its AI division

https://www.theverge.com/news/804253/meta-ai-research-layoffs-fair-superintelligence
319•Lionga•3h ago•231 comments

Look, Another AI Browser

https://manuelmoreale.com/thoughts/look-another-ai-browser
146•v3am•3h ago•95 comments

Cryptographic Issues in Cloudflare's Circl FourQ Implementation (CVE-2025-8556)

https://www.botanica.software/blog/cryptographic-issues-in-cloudflares-circl-fourq-implementation
129•botanica_labs•6h ago•61 comments

André Gorz, the Theorist Who Predicted the Revolt Against Meaningless Work (2023)

https://znetwork.org/znetarticle/andre-gorz-was-the-theorist-who-predicted-the-revolt-against-mea...
25•robtherobber•6d ago•2 comments

MinIO stops distributing free Docker images

https://github.com/minio/minio/issues/21647#issuecomment-3418675115
585•LexSiga•14h ago•349 comments

Introducing Galaxy XR, the first Android XR headset

https://blog.google/products/android/samsung-galaxy-xr/
119•thelastgallon•3h ago•115 comments

Bild AI (YC W25) Is Hiring a Founding AI Engineer

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/bild-ai/jobs/m2ilR5L-founding-engineer-applied-ai
1•rooppal•3h ago

Linux Capabilities Revisited

https://dfir.ch/posts/linux_capabilities/
146•Harvesterify•6h ago•28 comments

The Tonnetz

https://thetonnetz.com/
9•mci•4d ago•3 comments

ROG Xbox Ally runs better on Linux than Windows it ships with – up to 32% faster

https://www.tomshardware.com/video-games/handheld-gaming/rog-xbox-ally-runs-better-on-linux-than-...
48•jrepinc•1h ago•14 comments

Designing software for things that rot

https://drobinin.com/posts/designing-software-for-things-that-rot/
133•valzevul•22h ago•31 comments

AI assistants misrepresent news content 45% of the time

https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2025/new-ebu-research-ai-assistants-news-content
354•sohkamyung•6h ago•249 comments

SourceFS: A 2h+ Android build becomes a 15m task with a virtual filesystem

https://www.source.dev/journal/sourcefs
103•cdesai•7h ago•41 comments

Show HN: Cuq – Formal Verification of Rust GPU Kernels

https://github.com/neelsomani/cuq
3•nsomani•45m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Create interactive diagrams with pop-up content

https://vexlio.com/features/interactive-diagrams-with-popups/
21•ttd•5h ago•0 comments

Cyborgs vs. rooms, two visions for the future of computing

https://interconnected.org/home/2025/10/13/dichotomy
15•surprisetalk•3d ago•8 comments

Internet's biggest annoyance: Cookie laws should target browsers, not websites

https://nednex.com/en/the-internets-biggest-annoyance-why-cookie-laws-should-target-browsers-not-...
459•SweetSoftPillow•8h ago•465 comments

42,600 ton ship to break the world record for the deepest drill at 7 miles

https://blog.bostonorganics.com/chinas-42600-ton-meng-xiang-aims-drill-7-miles-deep-breaking-reco...
34•speckx•2h ago•14 comments

I See a Future in Jj

https://steveklabnik.com/writing/i-see-a-future-in-jj/
83•steveklabnik•3h ago•57 comments

Die shots of as many CPUs and other interesting chips as possible

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Birdman86
180•uticus•5d ago•34 comments

Django 6.0 beta 1 released

https://www.djangoproject.com/weblog/2025/oct/22/django-60-beta-released/
12•webology•38m ago•3 comments

The Body Keeps the Score Is Bullshit

https://josepheverettwil.substack.com/p/the-body-keeps-the-score-is-bullshit
128•adityaathalye•1h ago•115 comments

The Logarithmic Time Perception Hypothesis

http://www.kafalas.com/Logtime.html
37•rzk•5h ago•18 comments

Patina: a Rust implementation of UEFI firmware

https://github.com/OpenDevicePartnership/patina
114•hasheddan•1w ago•17 comments
Open in hackernews

Look, Another AI Browser

https://manuelmoreale.com/thoughts/look-another-ai-browser
145•v3am•3h ago

Comments

theusus•2h ago
Look, another article about AI
icapybara•2h ago
AI is newsworthy.
tinfoilhatter•2h ago
That's subjective. I don't consider Chromium retrofitted with Chat-GPT newsworthy. Some people might. I also don't fault the commenter for being tired of the majority of content on this site being LLM-adjacent. I'm certainly over it.
phplovesong•2h ago
Its not "AI slapped on top" but AI slopped on top.

I will use an "AI browser" over my dead body.

nextworddev•2h ago
until your company rolls it out
stalfosknight•1h ago
Please don't give the pointy-haired boss ideas.
btown•2h ago
To be sure, a browser that retains a representation of every word you read on it, constantly synthesizing a profile on your preferences, using that profile to filter everything you see through a lens that consistently enforces and limits the worldview of a snapshot-of-you - all with a level of data retention that would be controversial for Google but that OpenAI's users will happily opt into, that Palantir and its government clients are likely salivating over, and that is fertile ground for a new generation of ads that bypass pesky things like third-party cookie restrictions - must be exciting to many!

It's just not exciting to me.

microtonal•1h ago
Another possible aspect of it is that probably more and more sites are blocking AI crawlers through e.g. Cloudflare's support for blocking AI crawler and AI agents. This will give them a backdoor to that content through a user's connection.

I am not sure if this is happening, but as blocking becomes more prevalent, having a widely-used browser will help.

ikmckenz•1h ago
Why won't these sites simply block this browser?
jazzyjackson•1h ago
Because this browser is just chromium and its user agent will be indistinguishable
Zetaphor•1h ago
It can (and likely will) just transmit standard browser signals. The AI integration is more of a UI layer on top, not something that is being sent in a request header UA string.

That lack of signals in addition to the regular human behavior patterns that something like Puppeteer doesn't have is going to make this practically impossible to block

xena•11m ago
I downloaded it to see if Anubis can block it. It lies and claims to be Google Chrome.
btown•59m ago
I can just see the news story now:

"Oops, we got caught using our customers' internet connections as exit nodes for the largest residential proxy ever to exist, both on pages they visited and ones that they didn't. But don't worry, this was an unauthorized experimental rollout to only parts of the world that we don't have legal nexus in. The program has been halted, and the person responsible has been sacked. Mynd you, møøse bites Kan be pretty nasti..."

ToucanLoucan•1h ago
Man, I miss the old days, seeing new tech come out and not immediately wondering how the worst parts of our industry are going to turn it into the torment nexus.
ljm•32m ago
I remember the optimism:

Google is launched and it is web directories but…better. It takes a decade to become a monolithic ad-tech company but all is not lost yet, until it becomes the face of enshittification of the entire internet another decade on.

Facebook is launched and it’s this cool way to keep in touch with your friends until that too becomes a monolithic ad-tech company a decade later, and soon after becomes the face of enshittification of social media as a whole, lowering the bar on civility to a subterranean level.

Ditto for Amazon and the enshittification of online retail. And Microsoft with.. whatever the hell you call Windows these days.

What took 10, 20, even 30 years to show up as being bad for society now takes just a couple of years, maybe even less than that. Maybe even straight away.

It’s like the stagnation of Asimov’s Galactic Empire. A bunch of crusty old tech companies, too big to change.

the_snooze•2m ago
So much modern tech is just about capture and extraction, not actually empowering the end user. It's as if guitar companies found a way to make more money in claiming royalties on musicians' work instead of building good guitars.
everdrive•40m ago
If such a browser was unavoidable I'd just drop off the web and read books. They can only turn the screws so much.
neom•30m ago
I hear Ray Bradbury is a pretty good novelist.
ngruhn•2h ago
Most of what most people do, who sit 8h a day in front of a computer, is in the browser. So I see where this product idea is coming from...
deciduously•2h ago
Is this true? Most of mine is in a text editor. In a previous role, it was in Excel. My partner spends her day in Power BI, etc etc. Are we outliers? What jobs are mostly in browsers instead of task-oriented specific other software tools?
mguerville•1h ago
Sales (CRMs are all in browser now), Marketing (entire stack, include some creative (Canva) is in browser now), Strategy is half in powerpoint/xls (creating content) and half in browser (researching info), HR (Workday, LinkedIn, etc.), product (Figma, Miro, Aha!, Linear), support (Asana/Jira) probably spend at least 50% of their working time in browser. Also the time people are at their desk but not working, is usually in browser (check news, stocks, blogs, personal email, etc.)
glenstein•1h ago
It seems like for better or worse if you want to be a web company, there's a lot of incentive to try and become a platform. A limitation for the likes of Zoom, Dropbox, Proton, and seemingly OpenAI is they have to struggle to integrate with calendars, office suites, and even the browser itself. And it may be turning out to be true that it's more feasible to simply invent your own parallel ecosystem of benefits and office suites and online storage drives than to attempt to negotiate with the gatekeepers of existing ones.

I would like to think that the "real" solution is strong web protocols and interoperability, And perhaps even something like an explicit anti-platform ethos. As it stands it seems like the strategy of being a platform is to outrace protocols in terms of offering new capabilities. But it would at least be nice if protocols are close enough behind that they're effectively a "safety net", or the equivalent of generic drugs, that everyone can fall back to.

jimbokun•1h ago
Building a successful platform has always been the winning move from the beginning of the computer industry.
giancarlostoro•2h ago
Can easily bypass captcha when your human confirms it for you.
josefritzishere•2h ago
This is so underwhelming.
Terr_•1h ago
Worse: The main way it could whelm involves exploiting the user for evil.
bengoodger•2h ago
Genuinely curious - what do people want to see from a new/different rendering engine?

The web is crazy complex these days because it is an entire app platform.

The incentive for anyone building a browser is to use the platform that gives you the best web compat especially at the outset when you don’t have enough users of your app to be able to make big changes to the platform. Even Chrome didn’t start from scratch - it used WebKit!

The Chromium community has built an excellent open platform that everyone can use. We are fortunate to be able to use it.

glenstein•2h ago
I think the concerns are not about feature requests but about leveraging embrace-extend-extinguish dynamics to push the web as a whole closer to being locked into dependence on Google as a platform. There are mountains of articles on the topic, ranging from ad blockers to privacy to DRM. But the critiques are old news to anyone who's been following the topic for a while.
hashim-warren•2h ago
I would like scratch made browser to focus on performance.

Chromium browsers eat my RAM and drain my computer battery.

stalfosknight•1h ago
Try Safari. No browser is snappier or more power efficient.
mathieudombrock•1h ago
I think Google has proven with their recent actions concerning android that they really can't be trusted with big, critical open source projects.
bigyabai•1h ago
The Play Store services are not a critical open source project, though. The AOSP is still intact and maintained in accordance with the licensing.

The application signing backtrack is an issue, but more of a political problem than a technical one. America's lesson here has been written on the wall for years: regulate your tech businesses, or your tech businesses will regulate you.

MYEUHD•1h ago
Where is the source code for AOSP 16 QPR1?

Where are the security patches of the past couple of months?

eikenberry•1h ago
I'd like to see browsers support the Gemini protocol and the Gemtext format.
jay_kyburz•1h ago
Full support for Ublock Origin. Perhaps at the native level rather than as an extension.
username223•1h ago
> The web is crazy complex these days because it is an entire app platform.

I'd prefer something that's not crazy complex, that's not "an entire app platform" designed and implemented by Google. Google essentially controls the W3C (Mozilla would vanish if Google stopped funding it), and controls the monopoly rendering engine.

Half of websites are better without JavaScript and web fonts, and 99% are just text, images, and videos with maybe a few simple controls. For the other 1% I can fire up Google Chrome and suffer the whole platform.

I want a web rendering engine for the 1%, that does the simple stuff quickly and isn't a giant attack surface around 30 years of technical debt and unwanted features calling itself an "application platform."

bengoodger•4m ago
I too have nostalgia for a time when prices were reasonable, politicians didn't philander and children respected their elders.

And yet here we are :-)

For what it's worth, despite it being /en vogue/ to rag on Google, the Chrome team has some of the most talented and dedicated folks focused on building a vibrant and interesting web for most people in the world.

thyristan•1h ago
> Genuinely curious - what do people want to see from a new/different rendering engine?

It should be fast when rendering HTML/CSS. I don't really care about JavaScript performance, because where possible I switch it off anyways.

It should be customizable and configurable, more than Firefox was before Electrolysis and certainly much more than Chrome.

It should support addons that can change, override, mangle, basically do everything imaginable to site content. But with configurable permissions per site.

It should support saving the current state of a website including the exact rendering at that moment for archiving. It should also support annotations (like comments, emphasis, corrections) for that. And it should support diffs for those saved states.

And if you include "the browser" in that:

I want a properly usable bookmarks manager, not the crap that current browsers have. Every bookmark should include (optionally, but easily) the exact page state at the time of bookmarking. Same for history.

Sync everything to a configurable git repo: config, bookmarks, history, open windows/tabs, annotations and saved website snapshots.

I want easily usable mass operations, like "save me every PDF from this tab group", "save all the pictures and name them sometopic-somewebsite-date-id.jpg" or "print all tabs that started with this search and all sites visited from there as PDF printouts into the documentation folder".

I want the ability to watch a website for changes, so the browser visits in the background and notifies me if anything relevant is different (this could be a really hard thing to get right I guess...).

I want "network perspectives" (for lack of a better word): show me this website as it would look from my local address, over this VPN, with my language set to Portuguese, ..., easily switchable per tab.

I want completely configurable keybindings for everything, like vimperator, but also for the bookmark manager, settings, really everything.

And I want a pony ;)

codeflo•2h ago
To find out what someone truly believes, don't listen to what they say, observe how they act. I don't see how OpenAI's recent actions make any sense from the perspective a company that internally believes it's actually close to unlocking super-intelligence.
aabhay•2h ago
OpenAI has always had the stance of “commercialize narrow AI that is research aligned with AGI development”. In fact they used to ask this as an interview question — “should we commercialize narrow AI or aim to put all resources into AGI”. The correct answer required you to prove you drank the kool aid and also wanted to make tons of money.
sikimiki•1h ago
Is there a correct answer?
ghjv•27m ago
Makes sense, I guess. Did you hear that question yourself in an interview, hear it from someone who interviewed, or hear that as a story through the grapevine? and ~when was it asked?
superjose•1h ago
I think they need to respond to all the funds they've raised and need to generate money somehow beyond subscriptions.
Terretta•1h ago
No, but their actions do suggest they think they're nearing a disruption to both browser and web page: a new way to acquire and make use of information.

Like an information OS for the information cloud.

codyb•2m ago
I suspect that this will always be just one more year away like Tesla's robotaxis
ninininino•17m ago
They are multiple companies in-one. One that is pushing for AGI, model development, one that is trying to build consumer apps and "win" AI applications/platform moat.
deepanwadhwa•2h ago
umm, I am not a fan of any of the recent new browsers but what's wrong with Chromium in itself? I think Chromium is pretty good, technologically mature, foss.
Renaud•1h ago
Chromium is highly dependent on Google’s interests. We see how they chose to implement Manifest V3 in a way that, through a strange coincidence(/s), neuters the capabilities of Ad Blocking extensions.

All downstream browsers are affected by Google’s bottom line. Putting lipstick and a few nice features on top of an engine that you don’t control doesn’t make your browser a true alternative from Google’s.

jqpabc123•2h ago
I guess if you ask ChatGPT to build a browser for you, this is what you get.
anshumankmr•2h ago
If I can't get extensions to work on it the browser just feels useless.
ihorcher•13m ago
Modern mainstream web is unusable without and ad-blocker. If it can't have uBlock, adguard, etc in it then it's basically useless
glenstein•2h ago
I'm glad this point is continuing to get hammered home. Because on what feels like a nearly daily basis, I'm still seeing people surprised and learning for the first time that what they think of as a whole browser ecosystem is really just a bunch of things using a Chromium foundation.

But to try and be constructive for whoever's reading and thinking of their next AI browser, I would be impressed by a wholly alternative browser engine, or demonstrations of major capacity to maintain programming upkeep of alternatives on par with the programming capacity supporting Chromium. A big part of the Chromium "moat" as it exists right now is the ability to bring disproportionate resources to bear on browser engine modernization. I would be impressed if AI tools were being used to demonstrably close the gap, because it conceivably could have important implications for getting us away from the browser monopoly problem.

jackblemming•2h ago
Why would they build their own browser from scratch? That would be dumb without a significantly compelling reason. The author of this post reminds me of one of those guys who writes an entirely new game engine instead of using an off the shelf product and ends up never completing the game..
floren•2h ago
Surely they should just be able to prompt their code assistant to write a complete browser and come back in a couple days to find it running, right?
jobigoud•1h ago
I'm curious why these things are not distributed as extensions rather than full browsers.
thedelanyo•1h ago
They could simply vibe-code a new browser engine from scratch using gpt - I believe that's the whole purpose of the AI stories?
hellotomyrars•1h ago
Good grief. Developers who use Unity/Unreal/Game Maker/ whatever don’t announce their game as being a revolutionary new tech.

The problem isn’t that they made yet another chromium based browser with their garbage on top. The problem is that they’re positioning it as this exciting and radical new thing when it’s just chromium with their garbage on top.

thelastgallon•2h ago
So, Atlas, Comet, Edge, Dia, Brave, Opera, etc are all Chromium.

And any browser on iOS uses the safari engine under the hood?

Looks like we are down to two browsers.

CapmCrackaWaka•2h ago
I use Orion as my daily driver, mostly because of its Kagi integration.
SoKamil•1h ago
>any browser on iOS uses the safari engine under the hood?

Literally every browser on iOS. Up until iOS 17.4 you were not even allowed to have alternative browser engine. And that still holds true outside EU.

https://developer.apple.com/support/alternative-browser-engi...

L3viathan•1h ago
Firefox still exists.
stOneskull•1h ago
firefox is the best, and gemini in google search results is enough, for me.
jimbokun•1h ago
First, Chromium is also based on WebKit so that means really only one browser engine.

Second, I imagine so many web sites and web applications have, knowingly or unknowingly, made themselves dependent on WebKit or Chromium specific behavior, it's almost impossible to write a new browser compatible with all (or even most) of the web.

jazzyjackson•1h ago
Zen is a really nice Firefox fork.

Ladybird is coming along.

jdiff•1h ago
Zen is an incredibly thin layer on top of Firefox, with some rather glaring performance and battery life issues. Battery life in particular was already not one of Firefox's strong suits. It looks nice, there's some interesting and useful ideas there, but Zen is ultimately "just Firefox" the same way that all of these AI browsers are "just Chromium." Ladybird's the only new kid on the block for a decade.
leshokunin•1h ago
There's Orion. It's not bad, but I don't love it either.
ztratar•2h ago
This is a funny post. Shows how deeply technical folks fail to understand business, risk, and open source.

Chromium is great. Why exactly should they innovate their first? A v1 should take whats available and not seek to reinvent the wheel.

guluarte•2h ago
companies are just riding the hype of the last tool, last season was cursor, then clis and now browsers
didip•1h ago
Why the negativity? A browser is the gateway between end user and technology/information/AI themselves.

Of course everyone with money is racing trying to control it. It makes sense.

magicalist•1h ago
> Why the negativity?

Because:

> A browser is the gateway between end user and technology/information/AI themselves. Of course everyone with money is racing trying to control it.

?

bigstrat2003•1h ago
Because people are tired of seeing LLMs, which aren't even good at the things they are claimed to be good at, shoehorned into everything whether or not it provides a shred of value to the user.
jimbokun•1h ago
What's the benefit for the consumer?
AlienRobot•1h ago
>To the surprise of literally nobody, it’s Chromium with AI slapped on top

We should start calling browsers "Chromiums."

My favorite Chromium is Vivaldi, by the way. It doesn't have AI slapped on it, but it has native a RSS client, e-mail client, vertical tabs, notes, a way to separate tabs into "workspaces" and a way to save tabs into "sessions" that you can reopen later, and it native profiles like Chrome. There are also countless settings you can customize (and lots of terrible defaults that you will want to customize, like rocker gestures). It's pretty much Opera 2.0 without the crypto. These features feel to me far more useful than AI.

sfink•1h ago
"Chromia" has a nice ring to it. "OpenAI just increased the number of Chromia by one."
superjose•1h ago
Love Vivaldi! It has improved significantly over the years! I use it in tandem with Firefox.

I love to have thumbnail tabs!

ryanrasti•1h ago
Agree with the other comments that it's not fundamentally innovative and no one with a sense of privacy wants to ship all browsing data to one of the mega-AIs.

BUT -- that's missing the strategic point here:

- Everyone realizes that being the gatekeeper for user interaction is key: that's where all the context is and utility will come from

- AI is providing a unique opportunity to overturn a long-held monopoly (Chrome's dominance) by providing

Put another way, ChatGPT + Chromium = OpenAI's Trojan horse.

It would be foolish for them to waste resources innovating on the browser engine (which isn't their core competency) when they can use their actual competency (AI) to take their bet at capturing the market

tehryanx•1h ago
Rolling your own browser is 10x more dangerous than rolling your own auth or crypto. Building on top of chromium is a good thing here.
binarymax•28m ago
I think the point is: why is OpenAI wasting its time on this? If it's just another channel for billing tokens then OK I guess, but it's not like it's a huge breakthrough.

OpenAI should be the roads, not the trucks. Let other product teams sort out the AI browsers. OpenAI has lots of problems to solve related to models and thats where they should focus. This is a side quest.

ChrisArchitect•1h ago
More discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45658479
thm•1h ago
This weird solution of storing representations, and not the actual events/data can't age well.

Like flying a plane but instead of logging flight data digitally, you film the cockpit gauges with a camcorder.

labrador•1h ago
> Yesterday, OpenAI announced Atlas, its AI browser. To the surprise of literally nobody, it’s Chromium with AI slapped on top. Perplexity also has a browser: it’s called Comet, and it also is Chromium with AI slapped on top. Then we have DIA, which is, you guessed it, Chromium with AI slapped on top. I think Opera also has one of those Chromium browsers with AI slapped on top.

The interesting thing is what they "slap on top" of it then. In other words like a browser extension, how do they extend the browser? It's common to have a base model of something and then extend it with options of various capabilities. I don't really understand the complaint here.

The interesting thing to me about OpenAI's browser is how they will handle ad blockers. 95% of ChatGPT users use the free version and OpenAI needs to monetize that.

Building a chromium replacement is a daunting task. in fact microsoft gave up on thiers and adopted chromium for that reason. Chromium is an industry wide open source project like linux for good reason

I'd like a Chromium base model that I can add AI features to that I need. We have a mechanism for that called extensions, but I imagine there are features that require deeper integration with Chromium. We had a mechanism for that called ActiveX on IE and Netscape Plugins on other browsers but we got rid of that for security reasons.

We're at an interesting point in browser development and I'm excited about it

zamadatix•1h ago
Building on top of a bunch of things works well, and is pretty much what Chromium itself is anyways. Building something "new" that is 99% the old thing so you can add your 1% is a different kind of building, and can't be lumped with the former by default. More powerful extensions is definitely the answer, just not one Google wants to allow.

The main problem with this is if browser A adds feature 1 and browser B adds feature 2 then you don't end up with "Chromium + 1 + 2" you end up with "Chromium + 1" or "Chromium + 2". Repeat for a couple dozen Chromium folks and your single extra feature doesn't look all that enticing anymore. The inverse way of looking at it is "if you're only adding 1% on top of Chromium, it's unlikely to amount to anything worth the average user switching for". Especially since Chrome is starting to push Gemeni natively anyways.

For these reasons, I think Chromium paint jobs are the least interesting thing to happen to browser development in a very very long time. Servo for embedded, Ladybird for "something different", and so on are much more interesting. These kinds of things, as you say, are more to the scale of what an individual browser extension used to be.

labrador•1h ago
I've been very impressed by the open source Ladybird project for several years now. I wasn't up to date and didn't realize it had 8 full time engineers working on it now with project leader Andreas Kling. This is truely more promising than "slapping things on Chromium" and competing with Google Chrome.

I didn't explicity state but was implying that a new plug in archeticture to the open source Chromium project might be an interesting way to add AI features in a more democratic fashion.

Either path still has to compete with what Google does with proprietary extensions to Chrome.

Edit to be clear: Since Chromium is open source, the community could actually collaborate on adding a shared AI plugin architecture to the core project rather than making competing forks. That would solve the fragmentation problem entirely.

encom•34m ago
>Chromium is an industry wide[...]

But is it though? Feels to me like Google just does whatever it wants. Nobody except Google wants manifest v3. Nobody wants "Web Environment Integrity", etc.

labrador•19m ago
I agree that Google's control over the Chromium roadmap is a fundamental issue, making "industry-wide" a generous term. Brave (which I use) and other Chromium-forks exist to ensure the community does have its own branch. Brave disables WEI and forked the Manifest V2 code to ensure its built-in Shields and essential extensions (like uBlock Origin, which I also use) remain unaffected by Google's anti-user changes.
charcircuit•1h ago
>I guess building an actual browser, from scratch

No one does this. For example all the major browsers reach out to an existing library to implement rendering for fonts. There is so mich complexity and already a solution to solve the problems and allow you to focus on something more important. There are benefits in standardizing on a single thing and having everyone working to improveia common base. Considering the actual rendering and functionality of the web is standardized the most exciting features kf a browser will be outside of the browser engine.

CjHuber•1h ago
So how are these browsers treating captchas. Are they waiting for human intervention like chatgpt agent mode? they must be right? but then its almost useless
nikolay•52m ago
These all envy Edge and Chrome for having nice AI integration built-in. But the last thing we need is a bunch of "new" browsers!
throwacct•43m ago
Nah.. I'm good. I use brave for daily use and that's it. My family uses safari by default and won't switch over since they're not tech savvy.
spwa4•35m ago
The point of why "it's so special" is that:

1) a browser contains all the information marketing firms and companies kill for. The buying habits of billions of people, hell it contains more than that: it contains all sorts of data about what exactly makes people buy.

2) OpenAI's browser generates excitement and might actually make this information available for OpenAI to sell

3) This would be a totally new revenue stream for OpenAI, maybe a dozen new revenue streams

cowmix•32m ago
This post resurfaced a thought I had. MSFT is really, really pushing AI. It would be really cool if someone attempted, with any of the coding models / agents, to recreate Windows from "scratch". THAT would be very interesting, and useful -- on my levels.
wilg•30m ago
It's interesting that no one in this thread seems to use ChatGPT particularly deeply to understand why this is useful. I think this is very interesting, I don't particularly love Chrome, so a version of Chrome that more deeply integrates with one of the most common things I do in my browser (use ChatGPT) is very interesting!
chrisstanchak•28m ago
Really love the design of your site. Homemade?
ihorcher•20m ago
This could be a legal loophole to scrape all the data from websites that block you directly. Your users will grab all the data for themselves and you just put some telemetry here and there and here we go, we scrape all the web without even using our own IPs
yahoozoo•16m ago
It’s truly amazing how much money is being poured into these companies only for them to produce such boring and uninspired products.