It was created by a structured editor project at the
INRIA, a French national research institution, and later adopted by the
World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) as their
testbed for
web standards;[8] a role it took over from the
Arena web browser.[9][10][11] Since the last release in January 2012, INRIA and the W3C have stopped supporting the project and active development has ceased.[12][13]
Amaya has relatively low
system requirements, even in comparison with other
web browsers from the era of its active development period, so it has been considered a "lightweight" browser.[14]
History
Amaya originated as a direct descendant of the Grif WYSIWYG[15]SGML editor created in the early 1980s,[16] and of the
HTML editor Symposia, itself based on Grif, both developed and sold by French software company Grif SA.
The last change of code of Amaya was on 22 Feb 2013.[17]
Amaya was formerly called Tamaya.[24] Tamaya is the name of the type of tree represented in the logo, but it was later discovered that Tamaya is also a trademark used by a French company, so the developers chose to drop the first letter to make it "Amaya".[25]
^"Amaya 11.4.4". 8 January 2012. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
^Error: Unable to display the reference properly. See
the documentation for details.
^Vatton, Irène (9 December 2009).
"Amaya Binary Releases". World Wide Web Consortium.
Archived from the original on 30 June 2010. Retrieved 10 July 2010.
^Dubie, Bill; Sciuto, Dave (30 November 2006).
"Amaya a win for Web coding". Seacoast online.
Archived from the original on 9 March 2009. Retrieved 8 March 2009.
^"Welcome to Amaya".
W3C. Retrieved 8 March 2014. The application was jointly developed by W3C and the WAM project (Web, Adaptation and Multimedia) at INRIA. It is no more developed.