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Not quite
MinWin doesn't contain an HTML rendering engine - it contains an HTTP communication stack so that MinWin based systems can call web services.

I think it safe to say that in the future, Microsoft will continue to harden the security surrounding IE "pages" and lighten the cost of creating new pages in new isolated threads/fibers.
Posted by: de-void   Posted on: 07/06/09 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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Google Chrome already has done this.  HollywoodDog | 07/02/09
IE did it before Chrome  ArnavM | 07/02/09
IE tab isolation is not the same as Chrome's  mick z | 07/05/09
Actually...  MyBlueRex | 07/06/09
IOW, IE sucks too badly to serve web apps  Mikael_z | 07/13/09
No, they took a step in the right direction  kaninelupus | 07/06/09
RE: Microsoft's Gazelle browser: A layperson's explanation  joe1972 | 07/02/09
RE: Microsoft's Gazelle browser: A layperson's explanation  armchairtheorist | 07/02/09
Will this be helpful in Midori??  ArnavM | 07/02/09
Slow down a little...  kaninelupus | 07/06/09
What was IE doing?  HollywoodDog | 07/02/09
Opera did tabs first  wanorris | 08/17/09
Gazelle? Fascinating. Just Fascinating.  Dietrich T. Schmitz | 07/02/09
This is an oringinal  googlewatcher | 07/13/09
In other MS browser news  Richard Flude | 07/02/09
In other MS browser news  billfranke@... | 07/06/09
I wondered why the minwin had an http engine  Drakaran | 07/06/09
Not quite  de-void | 07/06/09
"Browser Kernel"  jparr | 07/08/09
Wey  www.hayda.net | 11/11/09

What do you think?

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