It’s ok to not have millions of uses. OmniWeb was released for NeXTSTEP back in 1995 and came to the Mac as NeXT was absorbed by Apple. It never saw huge commercial success (as far as I know) and I saw an interview with Ken Case recently that mentioned he still uses it and keeps it updated, mostly for himself, though the builds are available for free for anyone else who might want it. Similarly, Linus Torvalds maintains uEmacs just because it’s what he’s used to and he recommends no one else use it.
If it strikes a chord and catches on, that is awesome, but even if it’s just for you and you enjoy it, you’re in good company maintaining a project that works exactly how you want.
I wasn’t a huge Arc fan, so it’s not for me, but I’m happy to see more browsers existing that aren’t built on Chromium. If you aren’t interested in maintaining it due to the lack of users and are ok with a Firefox engine with an Arc-like UI, the Zen browser maybe an option. I think that’s what a lot of former Arc users went to.
The entire project is made from zero, the only dependency it uses is WebKit itself. Looking through obscure undocumented functions and sometimes using Apple’s private frameworks to achieve effects others don’t even try.
And then I presented it to the world, and the world largely ignored it. I tried various channels, but it seems like asking people to switch browsers is just too much. It basically traumatized me and I lost interest in the project.
I hope this post will get more popular and more people can try the browser. I’d be grateful of someone reposted it on platforms like Reddit as I don’t have the karma to post in most subreddits and got insta banned once I tried.
You can download it for free, it’s simple, elegant, and tries to be what Safari should’ve been.
If you wrote own HTML/CSS/JS engine and targeted Linux (without using GTK), I'll be interested. Like that guy who actually made his own browser recently... unfortunately he chose to use GTK so that was an instant turn-off.
You and me both, BTW... Trust is at an all-time low these days, it seems.