Tuesday, June 17, 2008

xB Browser of 2008

Yesterday we got another writeup in the blogsite Lifehacker. I think if they knew what we had accomplished and what was in the pipeline, they would explode with jubilation. I notice there are still some people that think Torpark was abandoned. It is abandoned as much as Gaim was abandoned for Pidgin: It was just renamed. Yet still people hunger for it. Perhaps there needs to be more hoopla about that, who knows. However, the article covered that xB Browser will be available in 2008 for Mac and Linux as well. And they are right, there is a big big future for it, and we've got it imagined out.

There is a vision of a browser. It is cross-platform compatible. It runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux in a breeze. It does all the things that xB Browser today does, and more. What more? How about it being protected at the network level. It is incapable of leaking. It can view full flash and java and javascript without worrying about man-in-the-browser attacks, hijacks, or exploits. It stores no files on the local system, and encrypts everything. That's right, it has a totally encrypted cache, which gets wiped at shutdown. Not deleted. Not erased. Wiped, as in a secure deletion with rewriting.

This is the xB Browser that you will see debut in 2008.

Some of the shortcomings of the browser is that it will be slightly memory intensive. It will be bigger, it will look a little different. But it can remember your settings, and seamlessly integrate with your desktop configuration, running in a full sandboxed mode.

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