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![]() Midori v11.0 (November 2023) | |||
Developer(s) | Christian Dywan,[1] Nancy Runge, Astian Foundation | ||
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Initial release | 16 December 2007[2] | ||
Stable release(s) | |||
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Preview release(s) [±] | |||
9.0 (July 29, 2019[4]) [±] | |||
Repository | github | ||
Written in | originally in C & GTK2, rewritten completely in Vala & GTK3[5] | ||
Engine |
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Operating system | Linux, Android, Windows, macOS | ||
Platform | IA-32, AMD64, x86 | ||
Available in | 30 languages[6] | ||
Type | Web browser | ||
License | LGPL-2.1-or-later | ||
Website | astian |
Midori (Japanese: 緑, romanized: midori, lit. 'green') is a free and open-source web browser. In 2019, the Midori project was acquired by the Astian Foundation.[7][8] After the acquisition, the project became a derivative of the Firefox browser.[9]
Cris likes to cook. Add to that a passion for Chinese and Japanese tea. These days, kalikiana focuses on hacking on snapcraft, but is still fondly looking back to Midori, ElementaryOS and Ubuntu Touch.
In 2019, the Midori Browser project merged with the Astian Foundation to take development to new horizons, always respecting the pillars of the project.