Open source browser engine
Blink Developer(s) The Chromium Project Initial release 3 April 2013; 12 years ago (2013-04-03 ) [ 1] Repository Written in C++ Type Browser engine License BSD and LGPLv2.1 Website www.chromium.org/blink/
Blink is a browser engine developed as part of the free and open-source Chromium project. Blink is by far the most-used browser engine, due to the market share dominance of Google Chrome and the fact that many other browsers are based on the Chromium code.
To create Chrome, Google chose to use Apple's WebKit engine.[ 2] However, Google needed to make substantial changes to the WebKit code to support its novel multi-process browser architecture.[ 1] [ 3] Over the course of several years, the divergence from Apple's version increased, so Google decided to officially fork its version as Blink in 2013.[ 1] [ 3]
Blink's name was influenced by two factors: the implication of speed, and a reference to the non-standard blink HTML element,[ 4] [ 5] which was never actually supported by Blink.[ 6]
By commit count, Google was the largest contributor to the WebKit project from late 2009 until the fork in 2013.[ 7] One of the first changes of the new fork was to deprecate CSS vendor prefixes, including WebKit's; experimental Blink functionality is instead enabled on an opt-in basis.[ 8]
See also [ edit ]
Free and open-source software portal
Comparison of browser engines
V8, the Chromium JavaScript engine
References [ edit ]
^ a b c Barth, Adam (3 April 2013). "Blink: A rendering engine for the Chromium project" . blog.chromium.org . Archived from the original on 11 May 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2024 .
^ Fisher, Darin (5 September 2008). "Chrome <3s WebKit" . blog.chromium.org . Archived from the original on 12 March 2024. Retrieved 12 March 2024 .
^ a b Bright, Peter (3 April 2013). "Google going its own way, forking WebKit rendering engine" . Ars Technica . Conde Nast. Archived from the original on 21 December 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2017 .
^ Lardinois, Frederic (3 April 2013). "Google Forks WebKit And Launches Blink, A New Rendering Engine That Will Soon Power Chrome And Chrome OS" . TechCrunch. Archived from the original on 25 November 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2013 .
^ Shankland, Stephen (3 April 2013). "Google parts ways with Apple over WebKit, launches Blink" . CNet. Retrieved 25 November 2013 .
^ Kobie, Nicole (7 August 2013). "Firefox 23 finally kills "blink" tag" . PC Pro. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2013 .
^ Siracusa, John (12 April 2013). "Hypercritical: Code Hard or Go Home" . Hypercritical.co. Archived from the original on 1 May 2013. Retrieved 15 June 2013 .
^ "Blink Developer FAQ" . The Chromium Projects . Retrieved 22 October 2014 .
External links [ edit ]
Browser engines (comparison)
Stable
Blink
Gecko
WebKit
Goanna
MSHTML
NetSurf
Experimental Discontinued
EdgeHTML
KHTML
Mariner
Presto
Tasman
Tkhtml
Google
a subsidiary of Alphabet
Development
Software
Operating systems
Android
Cupcake
Donut
Eclair
Froyo
Gingerbread
Honeycomb
Ice Cream Sandwich
Jelly Bean
KitKat
Lollipop
Marshmallow
Nougat
Oreo
Pie
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
version history
smartphones
Android Automotive
Android Go
Android Things
Android TV
Android XR
ChromeOS
ChromeOS Flex
ChromiumOS
Fuchsia
Glass OS
gLinux
Goobuntu
TV
Wear OS
Machine learning models
BERT
Chinchilla
DreamBooth
Gemini
Imagen (2023)
LaMDA
PaLM
T5
Veo (text-to-video model)
VideoPoet
XLNet
Neural networks
EfficientNet
Gato
Inception
MobileNet
Transformer
WaveNet
Computer programs
AlphaDev
AlphaFold
AlphaGeometry
AlphaGo
AlphaGo Zero
AlphaStar
AlphaZero
Master
MuZero
Formats and codecs
AAB
APK
AV1
iLBC
iSAC
libvpx
Lyra
Protocol Buffers
Ultra HDR
VP3
VP6
VP8
VP9
WebM
WebP
WOFF2
Programming languages Search algorithms
Googlebot
Hummingbird
Mobilegeddon
PageRank
Panda
Penguin
Pigeon
RankBrain
Domain names
.app
.dev
.google
.zip
g.co
google.by
Typefaces
Croscore
Noto
Product Sans
Roboto
Hardware
Pixel
Smartphones
Pixel (2016)
Pixel 2 (2017)
Pixel 3 (2018)
Pixel 3a (2019)
Pixel 4 (2019)
Pixel 4a (2020)
Pixel 5 (2020)
Pixel 5a (2021)
Pixel 6 (2021)
Pixel 6a (2022)
Pixel 7 (2022)
Pixel 7a (2023)
Pixel Fold (2023)
Pixel 8 (2023)
Pixel 8a (2024)
Pixel 9 (2024)
Pixel 9 Pro Fold (2024)
Pixel 9a (2025)
Smartwatches
Pixel Watch (2022)
Pixel Watch 2 (2023)
Pixel Watch 3 (2024)
Tablets
Pixel C (2015)
Pixel Slate (2018)
Pixel Tablet (2023)
Laptops
Chromebook Pixel (2013–2015)
Pixelbook (2017)
Pixelbook Go (2019)
Other
Pixel Buds (2017–present)
Nexus
Smartphones
Nexus One (2010)
Nexus S (2010)
Galaxy Nexus (2011)
Nexus 4 (2012)
Nexus 5 (2013)
Nexus 6 (2014)
Nexus 5X (2015)
Nexus 6P (2015)
Tablets
Nexus 7 (2012)
Nexus 10 (2012)
Nexus 7 (2013)
Nexus 9 (2014)
Other
Nexus Q (2012)
Nexus Player (2014)
Other
Android Dev Phone
Android One
Cardboard
Chromebit
Chromebook
Chromebox
Chromecast
Clips
Daydream
Fitbit
Glass
Liftware
Liquid Galaxy
Nest
smart speakers
Thermostat
Wifi
Play Edition
Project Ara
OnHub
Pixel Visual Core
Project Iris
Search Appliance
Sycamore processor
Tensor
Tensor Processing Unit
Titan Security Key
Litigation
Advertising
Feldman v. Google, Inc. (2007)
Rescuecom Corp. v. Google Inc. (2009)
Goddard v. Google, Inc. (2009)
Rosetta Stone Ltd. v. Google, Inc. (2012)
Google, Inc. v. American Blind & Wallpaper Factory, Inc. (2017)
Jedi Blue
Antitrust
European Union (2010–present)
United States v. Adobe Systems, Inc., Apple Inc., Google Inc., Intel Corporation, Intuit, Inc., and Pixar (2011)
Umar Javeed, Sukarma Thapar, Aaqib Javeed vs. Google LLC and Ors. (2019)
United States v. Google LLC (2020)
United States v. Google LLC (2023)
Intellectual property
Perfect 10, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc. (2007)
Viacom International Inc. v. YouTube, Inc. (2010)
Lenz v. Universal Music Corp. (2015)
Authors Guild, Inc. v. Google, Inc. (2015)
Field v. Google, Inc. (2016)
Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc. (2021)
Smartphone patent wars
Privacy
Rocky Mountain Bank v. Google, Inc. (2009)
Hibnick v. Google, Inc. (2010)
United States v. Google Inc. (2012)
Judgement of the German Federal Court of Justice on Google's autocomplete function (2013)
Joffe v. Google, Inc. (2013)
Mosley v SARL Google (2013)
Google Spain v AEPD and Mario Costeja González (2014)
Frank v. Gaos (2019)
Other
Garcia v. Google, Inc. (2015)
Google LLC v Defteros (2020)
Epic Games v. Google (2021)
Gonzalez v. Google LLC (2022)
Related
Concepts
Beauty YouTuber
BookTube
BreadTube
"Don't be evil"
Gayglers
Google as a verb
Google bombing
2004 U.S. presidential election
Google effect
Googlefight
Google hacking
Googleshare
Google tax
Googlewhack
Googlization
Illegal flower tribute
Objectives and key results
Rooting
Search engine manipulation effect
Side project time
Sitelink
Site reliability engineering
StudyTube
VTuber
YouTube Poop
YouTuber
Products
Android
Booting process
Custom distributions
Features
Recovery mode
Software development
Street View coverage
Africa
Antarctica
Asia
Europe
North America
Oceania
South America
YouTube
Copyright strike
Education
Features
Moderation
Most-disliked videos
Most-liked videos
Most-subscribed channels
Most-viewed channels
Most-viewed videos
Arabic music videos
Chinese music videos
French music videos
Indian videos
Pakistani videos
Official channel
Social impact
YouTube Premium original programming
Other
Gmail interface
Maps pin
Most downloaded Google Play applications
Stadia games
Documentaries
AlphaGo
Google: Behind the Screen
Google Maps Road Trip
Google and the World Brain
The Creepy Line
Books
Google Hacks
The Google Story
Google Volume One
Googled: The End of the World as We Know It
How Google Works
I'm Feeling Lucky
In the Plex
The Google Book
The MANIAC
Popular culture
Google Feud
Google Me (film)
"Google Me" (Kim Zolciak song)
"Google Me" (Teyana Taylor song)
Is Google Making Us Stupid?
Proceratium google
Matt Nathanson: Live at Google
The Billion Dollar Code
The Internship
Where on Google Earth is Carmen Sandiego?
Other
"Attention Is All You Need"
elgooG
Generative pre-trained transformer
"Me at the zoo"
Predictions of the end
Relationship with Wikipedia
"Reunion"
Robot Constitution
Italics denote discontinued products.
Category
Outline