After years of development, Mozilla's Servo project has finally released its first official tagged version, v0.0.1. This is a significant milestone for the project, which aims to create a parallel web browser engine that can be used in other applications. Servo is not just another Chrome clone, but a true engine built from scratch with Rust, focusing on memory safety and parallelism. In theory, this allows for more efficient page rendering on modern multi-core processors, outperforming traditional monolithic engines. The developers aim to make Servo a secure and performant alternative for cases where Electron is currently used. Alongside the release, they have also made available pre-built binaries for Linux and, for the first time, for ARM-based macOS versions. You can download and try the demonstration browser shell to see how it works. While it may take until 2030 for someone to rewrite Slack or Teams on Servo, this is a promising start for the project.