My date was a guess, might go further back. Given the number of
developers who do track lynx frequent updates, its used in site testing
by professionals across the board, you might be surprised. As I said
earlier, the new York Times ran an article suggesting its use, this year.
You do not follow the development of any tools, even your own. that
might suggest you are in no position to comment on limitations that might
not even exist, let alone project your idea of cutting edge onto a tool.
Goodness there are some lynx compiles that can submit script buttons if
those buttons are designed to manage the enter key.
On Mon, 26 Aug 2019, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
I don't follow the development of any web browser, not even the one I
spend most of my waking hours in(Firefox), but if HTML5 has been a
standard since 2012 and Lynx has only had HTML5 support since 2016,
that still sounds like a rather significant amount of feature lag.
Not that I'd expect a text-mode browser to stay cutting edge, but it
does make you wonder how many web sites are one major upgrade away
from breaking in Lynx and how many web design teams wouldn't even be
aware it happened.
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