Samsung and Mozilla have announced that they're working together to construct a new internet browser engine for mobile devices based on ARM and Android.
The brand new browser engine has been named Servo by the 2 companies. In accordance with Mozilla, the brand new engine will be designed to make the most of 'tomorrow's sooner, multi-core' units, and eliminate outdated assumptions about how such engines ought to work.
Servo is coded in Mozilla's own programming language, called Rust. The
developer began work on it last year, with Samsung assisting it over the
last couple of months.
Mozilla has made the programming language available today – in an
experimental form – to Android developers. However, there is no word
when Servo itself will be released to developers or the public.
It is unclear if Servo is intended to replace Gekko – the engine that powers Firefox on computers today.
However, it is clear that the new engine is designed to take aim at
WebKit. WebKit powers Apple's Safari, Google's Chrome and the Opera
browsers on desktops. It also powers their mobile equivalents on iOS,
Android, BlackBerry 10, and Tizen.