Galeon is a discontinued Gecko-based web browser that was created by Marco Pesenti Gritti with the goal of delivering a consistent browsing experience to GNOME desktop environment. It gained some popularity in the early 2000s due to its speed, flexibility in configuration and features.

Galeon
Original author(s)Marco Pesenti Gritti
Developer(s)Philip Langdale
Tommi Komulainen
Ricardo Fernández Pascual
Yanko Kaneti
Crispin Flowerday[citation needed]
Initial releaseJune 2000; 24 years ago (2000-06)
Final release
2.0.7[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 27 September 2008; 16 years ago (27 September 2008)
Written inC
Operating systemUnix-like operating systems
TypeWeb browser
LicenseGNU General Public License
Websitegaleon.sourceforge.net

The disagreement over the future of Galeon split the development team in 2002, which resulted in the departure of the browser's initial author and several other developers. This event marked the beginning of the browser's popularity decline, which led to its discontinuation in September 2008. Some of Galeon's features were subsequently ported to Epiphany (now called Web) – the descendant of Galeon.

Features

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Galeon made use of Gecko's features including configuration options and standards support. Apart from that, Galeon had several features that were uncommon in browsers at that time:[2][3][4]

Development history

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The project was started by Marco Pesenti Gritti with the goal of creating a web browser that would be fast and consistent with the GNOME desktop environment. The first public version (Galeon 0.6) was released in June 2000.[3]

On the rise

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The first releases of Galeon were criticised for lack of such basic features as cookie and proxy support,[5] though the browser added some features with every release.[citation needed] Version 1.2 of Galeon introduced many new features that drew attention of the general public.[3][failed verification]

At the time of Galeon's creation, the most popular Linux browsers, including Netscape and Mozilla, were large multi-functional programs. This made them slow to start and often impractical due to their high memory usage and processor requirements.[6] Opera was somewhat faster, but it was proprietary software distributed in trialware and adware versions, both of which lacked some of the functionality of the Microsoft Windows version.[7][8]

Galeon was widely seen as one of the best Linux browsers available.[6][9] The polls revealed the substantial usage share of Galeon,[10] though its popularity was regarded as owing to lack of stability evident in Mozilla's browsers.[11][failed verification]

Split of the development team

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With the release of new version of the GTK+ widget toolkit, which was used to construct the user interface of Galeon, the team decided to write a new version of Galeon from scratch. At the same time the GNOME project has adopted its new human interface guidelines, which promoted simplicity and uniform design.[12] The Galeon team had differing opinions on the new guidelines. The author and lead developer, Marco Pesenti Gritti, endorsed them and saw the rewrite as an opportunity to make Galeon simpler. Many other developers believed that reducing the number of preferences and simplifying the user interface would harm the project.[3][13]

In November 2002,[3] as the result of several discussions on the topic Gritti made the decision to cease his work in Galeon and fork the project and started development of a HIG-compliant web browser he called Epiphany (now known as Web).[13][14]

After the split

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As Gritti no longer controlled the development of Galeon, the previous functionality was restored in subsequent releases and some new features were added,[15] though development got slow after the split.[3] At the same time the rising popularity of Firefox, its status of the default browser in major distribution and the overwhelming number of its extensions led to decline of Galeon's user base.[11][13]

Eventually the Galeon developers announced plans to halt development of Galeon, saying "the current approach is unsustainable" regarding the resources required to maintain it. Instead, they planned to develop a set of extensions for Epiphany to provide similar functionality.[13][16]

Persistence

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Even after development ceased in September 2008, the browser remained popular and in December 2011 was still available in some Linux distribution's repositories, such as Debian 6 Squeeze,[17] although it was not part of Debian 7 Wheezy.[18]

Reception

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Galeon was praised for its customizability and speed, as compared to Netscape Navigator and Firefox, though Konqueror and Opera were still faster on older hardware.[2][5][6][19] Galeon was noted for its session handling and crash recovery.[6]

In November 2002, OSNews conducted a poll to determine the most popular Gecko-based browser, which included several browsers for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and Linux, but didn't include Netscape Navigator and Mozilla Suite. The Linux-only Galeon was the second most popular, after cross-platform Firefox, at that time known as Phoenix.[10]

Critics noted Galeon's tricky plugin installation.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "galeon Files"
  2. ^ a b c Galeon at a glance, FreeOS.com, 15 June 2001, retrieved 16 November 2011
  3. ^ a b c d e f DeRosia, Chris (29 July 2003), Galeon History, archived from the original on 13 October 2011, retrieved 15 November 2011
  4. ^ README.ExtraPrefs file, The GNOME git repository, archived from the original on 3 May 2013, retrieved 16 November 2011
  5. ^ a b Hall, Michael (18 July 2000), Looking at the Galeon, Linux Planet, archived from the original on 4 April 2012, retrieved 16 November 2011
  6. ^ a b c d Valliere, Rob (9 May 2002), Valliere: 2002 Linux Browser Review, Linux Today, archived from the original on 11 February 2005
  7. ^ Dahle, Håvard (May 29, 2001), "[Opera-linux] The road ahead: features in linux vs. ms win client", opera-linux mailing list, archived from the original on April 15, 2012
  8. ^ aaron (May 29, 2001), "[Opera-linux] The road ahead: features in linux vs. ms win client", opera-linux mailing list, archived from the original on April 15, 2012
  9. ^ Krause, Ralph (March 2000), "Browser Comparison", Linux Journal (95), retrieved 17 November 2011
  10. ^ a b Loli-Queru, Eugenia (1 November 2002), Poll: Vote for the Best Mozilla/Gecko-based Browser, OSNews, retrieved 16 November 2011
  11. ^ a b Whitinger, Dave (9 February 2004), Firefox 0.8 is the release that won me over, LXer, retrieved 16 November 2011
  12. ^ Benson, Calum; Elman, Adam; Nickell, Seth & Robertson, Colin Z. (2002), GNOME Human Interface Guidelines (PDF) (1.0 ed.), The GNOME Usability Project, retrieved 3 April 2012
  13. ^ a b c d Min, Andrew, "Epiphany, the ultimate Gnome browser", The Ubuntu Applications book (under construction), Free Software Magazine, archived from the original on October 31, 2008, retrieved November 7, 2008
  14. ^ Former Galeon Maintainer Starts New Epiphany Browser Project, 19 February 2003, retrieved 16 November 2011
  15. ^ Topher The Web Guy (26 July 2003), Galeon Developer Interview, archived from the original on 13 November 2011, retrieved 16 November 2011
  16. ^ Langdale, Philip (22 October 2005), The future of Galeon, archived from the original on 27 September 2011, retrieved 15 November 2011
  17. ^ Debian, Package: galeon (2.0.7-2.1 and others), archived from the original on 16 September 2014, retrieved 27 December 2011
  18. ^ Debian, All Debian Packages in "wheezy", retrieved 29 December 2011
  19. ^ Jon (October 16, 2005), GEEKY FUN: Galeon Web Browser, archived from the original on March 8, 2012, retrieved November 16, 2011
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