@Jeff Schroeder: Except that in Inception the more dreams you recurse into, the faster the inner dreams run. I have a feeling that here the more browsers you recursively start, the slower they’ll become.
The only applications that can be remoted with this are those that use Gtk 3.0 (with no X specific code). Firefox is not such an app, so it can’t be remoted.
On the browser side, the only thing that is supported as a target for the gdk backend atm is firefox, but that is due to some minor details in how the browsers handle stuff. It should not be a real problem to port it to any browser that supports canvas and websockets.
See, I thought you were awesome when I first read about this mess. After using that meme I think I just… yeah, I’m totally going to make a GTK 3.0 application now. You’ve convinced me.
You crazy man!
Hehe, pure awesome! 🙂
I am looking forward to an online gnome3!
Not impressed. You could do that with Mozilla Chrome years ago. 😛
Seriously, really cool but I’m sure you can embed another level.
Now can you get gnome-terminal in a browser? If so, you could launch a browser in a browser and it would be like Inception.
@Jeff Schroeder: Except that in Inception the more dreams you recurse into, the faster the inner dreams run. I have a feeling that here the more browsers you recursively start, the slower they’ll become.
Then again, never underestimate alexl’s magic.
Can you please post a screenie of viewing 127.0.0.1:8080 from a browser in a browser,…. in a browser 🙂
Jesse:
Sorry, firefox is not Gtk3, and the new backend only supports firefox right now.
Ha ha ha ha!
Oh yes!
Question: What would the steady state of an infinite recursion of a HTML page look like? Can you recover exactly the same markup after an iteration?
@alexl
>firefox is not GTK3, and the new backend only supports firefox
Do you mean that only support Epiphany with Webkit works right now?
Smith:
Not sure what you mean.
The only applications that can be remoted with this are those that use Gtk 3.0 (with no X specific code). Firefox is not such an app, so it can’t be remoted.
On the browser side, the only thing that is supported as a target for the gdk backend atm is firefox, but that is due to some minor details in how the browsers handle stuff. It should not be a real problem to port it to any browser that supports canvas and websockets.
See, I thought you were awesome when I first read about this mess. After using that meme I think I just… yeah, I’m totally going to make a GTK 3.0 application now. You’ve convinced me.
You sounds like having a tongue twister, lots of browser word huh. 😀
But gnome3 is pretty good.
so how can i do this at my desktop?
please put a guide here..