My experience with big projects would confirm this. Getting the basic things implemented is quite fast, but the devil is in the details and they can drag on for years, if you didn't account for all of them in the beginning.
And there are a hell lot of details with the plattform called the web.
But I would think in this case here, they have no intention of going to 100% by all means, to support all the broken pieces of web garbage out there.
The goal is to implement the W3C specs. (they are even working on fixing the specs)
Oh and Kling specifically worked on browsers before, so that is a good base.
"I've had the opportunity to work on production browsers for many years (at Apple and Nokia)"
And there are a hell lot of details with the plattform called the web.
But I would think in this case here, they have no intention of going to 100% by all means, to support all the broken pieces of web garbage out there. The goal is to implement the W3C specs. (they are even working on fixing the specs)
Oh and Kling specifically worked on browsers before, so that is a good base.
"I've had the opportunity to work on production browsers for many years (at Apple and Nokia)"