 As you might know, KD has had browsers before. As an example, Conqueror was a pretty good one, in my opinion. I've used it for a good year. But also Falcon, which in theory is the current KD browser, is not very maintained but it's a decent browser. I think that you should try it out and if you like it you can stick with it. But there's a new one, well not really a new one, but on the desktop, yeah, it's very much new. It's called Angelfish. It's called Angelfish and it was originally a browser for Plasma Mobile, so intended for phone usage. But it was given a desktop layout and we can give a look at it. And I think that it's very clean and it looks good. Of course, it's very simple yet because, I mean, it was designed for a phone and now it's being brought to the desktop, but it already looks good in my opinion. You get tabs. By default, it's DuckDuckGo and we can search and if I can type anything. Angelfish, as I was saying, KD invent and that's where the source code is. We can do new tabs. It's very slow. My internet for some reason kind of died, but it works. You can, as an example, Angelfish Mobile wiki. It's not this one, is it? No, it's probably not, but it was the first link from DuckDuckGo. Google, let's admit it, would put the right link first, but this one does work. We can, I don't know, take a reddit, hold reddit.com slash r slash popular, as an example. And we've got here a big plus button to actually open up new tabs if you don't like this smaller one here. You've got the home tab to get back to the home, stop loading, back and forward. You also get an omurge menu with the few important options. High story is a sidebar, which is nice, I think. On the phone, it would probably become like an entire page, but on the desktop, it's a separate sidebar. You can search through it or clear it. Bookmarks, same thing, sidebar. And as far as you can go fullscreen. And then it's settings, but that's about it. Settings do feel very native to the desktop, which is nice. Of course, on mobile, it's going to be slightly different to adapt to the mobile form factor. And I think it's a really nice idea. You can see here. So you've got this list here. And if it becomes bigger, it becomes a sidebar. So yeah, it does adapt based on your device. It's very touch oriented. So if you like touch, this is probably the best browser you can use. Of course, it's based on Bling Chromium. I confuse those, but you understood what I meant. And people that know about this will correct me nicely. But if you use a touchscreen, this is nice. Like this works just nicely. Yep. And I think it's really, really nice to have a browser that actually adapts both through the mobile form factor and the desktop one. Of course, this is, I have now launched it in mobile, sorry, in desktop mode, but on a mobile phone, it will actually look different. It will have a bottom bar with a button for tabs and tabs are going to be a different view. So if you're interested in that, you can also try out Angle Fish on a Linux phone if you happen to have one. And it's really nice. I think that in general, generally speaking, the Plasma Mobile project is working on many apps that it's working on many apps that are initially intended for like the phone. But as soon as they get on desktop, sure, they don't have many features, but those features that they do have work nicely, they're touch oriented. So if you have a touch screen device like I do, it's going to be much easier to use them. And they do look good too. I have nothing to complain about like UI speaking. So Angle Fish, good job, like seriously good job on working on this new layout. It's completely new. I think it got merged a week ago or so. So completely new stuff. And it's very interesting Falcon. Let me actually show you Falcon as well for a reference. It's this one. And of course, the UI is slightly different. I personally prefer the UI of Angle Fish, but Angle Fish, sorry, but completely different stuff. Obviously, it has way more stuff. So as far as full fledged desktop browser go, of course, Falcon is more developed compared to Angle Fish, which is last week. And you can customize the toolbars, the sidebars. Again, you've got bookmarks and history as similarly to Angle Fish. New tabs, you can customize if you want tabs to be on the top or on the bottom. The tabs do use the look of the queue style. So with this nice blue line on the top, which is surely nice. And then you've got private windows and so on. I think that all of these things should be based on like, I don't want to say anything wrong, but it should, I think that QT as the, let me research QT web engine based on WebKit. If I got that correctly, hopefully, I think that's it. No, not Blink. Sorry, Blink was completely completely different WebKit. And you even get like separate search bars, very old school, but if it works, it works. I think that it's nice that browsers out there. Of course, personally, I use Firefox, not because I dislike these projects, but it's a very different thing. Like Firefox has a different approach and is really a different project. So if you're working on Linux mobile, it really makes sense to build something like Android Fish because just putting Firefox as it is now on our mobile phone, well, it just won't work. You have to use Firefox mobile, but that's for Android and Linux phones are not Android, so it's better to have something native. As far as I know, Firefox mobile is not native on Linux as far as I know. I could be very much wrong. And on the desktop though, what really helps is the fact that these projects do follow your system theme better than Firefox, Chrome, or similar stuff. And that's a big plus if you're into those sort of things like customizing the desktop appearance. And personally, I do that very often. So sometimes, I used to use these kind of browsers to make sure that everything looked really good. If you need a full-fledged web browser, of course, you're going to use Chromium Firefox because those are the full-fledged like developed for years and years browsers. But they're both options depending on what you need to do. So I do think that it's very nice that somebody is working on this, especially since Android Fish is so needed on a mobile form factor. I keep trying to resize Android Fish to try to make it mobile, but I should restart it as a mobile application. But yeah, super nice. And that was everything. Now let's go to the ending, which is super laggy as always. But hear me out, this should be the last video with a laggy ending because tomorrow, in theory, my new computer should ship to me and I'll have it. And by the way on that, thank you to all who donated to me because it made buying a new computer much, much easier. It's a big amount of money for me as a student. So all people donating to me really helped me out. So thank you so much. And hopefully, since tomorrow, everything is going to be snappier, higher resolution and everything. I'm sorry if there was lag throughout the video. I hope not. Anyways, you, not tomorrow, it's like New Year's Eve, but 1st of January or 2nd, probably 2nd of January. Bye.