It not only supports IPFS, it is "built on top of" it, according to the website.
This makes me wonder if it's usable for regular web browsing or only IPFS sites. The latter would sort of make it a splinternet browser, and way less interesting.
It's definitely the latter. The sites it renders are just markdown files stored on the IPFS network. I don't think it can render HTML let alone a modern web app on the internet
I don't really get the idea of decentralized internet.
The internet is already decentralized. There are millions of websites hosted on thousands of separately-owned machines.
"Decentralized" services like the fediverse use thus exact same structure and bind them together by a search/aggregation API.
The "centralized" part of the internet is DNS/IP Assignments, Service providers, and search.
You are perfectly allowed to go your whole life without using search, or by self-hosting searX.
If we go back to the age of webrings, that is essentially decentralized internet. It seems like every decentralized internet idea is just a rehash of this with some Tor ideas sprinkled in.
You are never going to be able to pull a "Silicon Valley" and make every device into a mini server. The ping and uptime would be horrific.
This is the de-mozillaed Firefox right? Iβve heard of it recently too. IPFS sounds really cool but isnβt it a dud because it uses a singular gateway or something?