My company is currently working with a 'container' that is based on
FF2. Our (web) application supports airport staff with checking in,
boarding, load control etc. There are 2 main reasons why we can't use
a standard web browser in these environments:
1-There are very specific peripheral devices that need to be
supported. it is bit too complex to describe this in detail, but we
need to support at least 4 different legacy middleware (common use)
systems that run boarding pass printers, bar code scanners etc.
Signals from these devices are passed on to the web server.
2-No open browsers are supported due to security regulations on the
airport, and if they exist, they are set to maximum security.

We resolved these issues by creating our own stripped version of FF2.
This version is:
-stripped (in order to limit the size of the executable
-does not have an address bar. It only contains a set number of URL's
(our prod system and some test systems)
-able to interact with the airport peripherals (exchanging device
addresses)

of course this container needed to be certified by the various
infrastructure providers, and it needs to be rolled out once.

The above solution works. It allows us to roll out a web based
application, and run it in airport environments, but rendering of FF2
is dramatic compared to any modern browser, especially Chrome. In
short, we want to redo this trick and use Google chrome open source as
the base for our new 'container'. Has anyone done something similar
before? Are there any suggestions? The main driver is: speed.

Cees.

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