At the end of his post, Bijan asked an interesting question today: “What do you want from your browser?” I commented there in response, and then realized I’d written a post, so I’m reblogging here. I said:
I think there’s a lot of room for innovation left in the browser. I find that a lot of the actions I take in the process of browsing the web are redundant (the pages I visit frequently, registration processes, sourcing/importing media for content creation, the disconnected sites I use for search and discovery for different verticals). These are all sets of actions that could be improved or even radically redefined by a hacker willing to step out of the bounds of the traditional browser paradigm we’ve been using since the mid 90s.
Flock was a nice first step, but it was not quite different enough from Firefox to justify leaving behind my incompatible extensions. Besides, Flock was an incremental step forward. I’d love to see someone blow the doors off the barn and really challenge what I think of a browser today.
PS: Hey Disqus, there should be a dropdead simple way to reblog a comment I made elsewhere on my own blog. Like, as simple as blogging a photo from Flickr. I think very interesting behavior could emerge from such a simple feature (much like the behavior behind the simple “@” feature in Twitter).


