From 3b602f754efe7c92de650d35a7fd3490f41c0180 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: armistace Date: Wed, 6 May 2026 11:45:52 +1000 Subject: [PATCH] update meta --- src/content/zen_browser__is_it_the_new_browser_for_me.md | 2 -- 1 file changed, 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/content/zen_browser__is_it_the_new_browser_for_me.md b/src/content/zen_browser__is_it_the_new_browser_for_me.md index 8ea905b..f6a35a9 100644 --- a/src/content/zen_browser__is_it_the_new_browser_for_me.md +++ b/src/content/zen_browser__is_it_the_new_browser_for_me.md @@ -7,8 +7,6 @@ Slug: zen-browser-new-browser-for-me Authors: Andrew Ridgway... and friends - glm-5.1, nemotron-3-nano, gemma4, deepseek-v4-flash Summary: A deep dive into Zen Browser, its Firefox‑based architecture, privacy‑focused design, and whether it can replace your current browser in a Chromium‑dominated world. ---- - ## 1. Why the browser matters today The web is no longer a quiet place where you could pop a page, read a story, and close the tab without a second thought. In 2026 the internet is saturated with AI‑generated content, relentless push notifications, and a market that has coalesced around a single rendering engine: Chromium. Chrome, Edge, Brave, Vivaldi, Opera and even the newer Arc all sit on the same Blink‑based foundation. That homogeneity brings convenience—websites only need to be tested once—but it also creates a monoculture where a single corporate decision can ripple through the entire ecosystem.