Zen Browser was first released on July 11 and is based on Firefox.
The Register reports that the project “reminds us strongly of Arc, a radical web browser based on Chromium.
Zen tries to do things differently, and it's based on Mozilla's Firefox… Instead of the tired old horizontal tab bar you see in both Firefox and Chrome, Zen has its own tab bar.
By default, this tab bar is narrow and just shows the page icons — We should mention that it has a few extra controls at the bottom of the sidebar, one of which expands the sidebar to show the page titles as well.
It's a new attempt to modernize web browsing by bringing tiles, workspaces and so on, and of course it's free of any Google code.
Zen's great implementation “Compact Mode” is distraction-free (hide elements like sidebar and topbar).
It is a browser, written using CSS, C++, JavaScript and a few other programming languages, with a community of over 30 people.
Being based on Firefox means that in addition to existing extensions, it can connect to Mozilla's Sync service and collect not only your bookmarks, but also your open tabs.
One of the greatest parts of Zen Browser is its community. Zen Browser is a project developed by the community…
You can get Zen Browser for Linux, Windows, and macOS from the app's official website (distributed via Flathub).