I've been doing some reading about this "bounty" to port Mozilla, and quite frankly, I find this suggestion not a very good one - and I'll explain:
Porting Mozilla to other OS's (and platform, for that matter) is not easy - SPECIALLY when it comes to Mozilla. Go ask Apple why they chose KDE's KHTML engine rather Mozilla (and Gecko based Firebird - for that matter).
I have at home a sub-notebook - a Pentium 300Mhz with 96 MB RAM, with 6GB hard drive. (It's not a powerful machine but should be enough to browse the web, don't you agree?), and unfortunately Mozilla Firebird (the "lite" version of Mozilla) running on Windows 98 (without anything else running, all tasks are killed) is DOG slow. I tried at the same machine using Redhat 7.2 + WindowMaker + Mozilla firebird - same result, although a bit faster, but still very slow.
Why do I mention this? because what people here wants is a browser that works in their 200+ Mhz PPC machines, and in the 600-1Ghz machines. While Mozilla should run very nice in the 600+Mhz machines, it will run dog-slow on the old machines..
What I would suggest (if someone out there cares) is another route:
How about porting Trolltech's QT library? why? simple:
1. QT itself can be run on frame-buffer without any problem.
2. The library itself is very well documented.
3. Porting QT will open the door for quite few more applications (based on KDE or QT) which can be used on AOS.
After you have QT ported - you can take something like KDENOX (available inside KDE CVS) and just recompile it against QT - and you have a working browser! KDENOX "gets" all the KHTML modifications from the KDE library which KDE & Apple Computer are working on..
Thoughts? comments? flames? :-o
Thanks,
Hetz (HeUnique)