Apple Safari to be released for the Windows Platform!


Recommended Posts

iTunes and Quicktime on Windows aren't even quality products yet....

I disagree. iTunes works wonders for me, and I've never found any other media player that works quite as well. I honestly have no problem with Quicktime and I wonder why people complain about it. I'd much rather use something like GOM Player, but Quicktime works well when I happen to use it.

I still stand by the fact that it doesn't deserve to be called the world's best browser until it proves itself on the Windows platform. Something with this many problems should be in limited release or atleast publizied much less. The first AIM 6.0 beta's for example, were hidden back in the corners of the AIM website because it was not nearly ready for a large release. This Safari beta has been slapped on the Apple homepage and in the downloads section, and it is being treated as much more finished than it really is.

Yes, it says "Safari 3 Public Beta" on the page, but they're treating it as finished :rolleyes:

I disagree. iTunes works wonders for me, and I've never found any other media player that works quite as well. I honestly have no problem with Quicktime and I wonder why people complain about it. I'd much rather use something like GOM Player, but Quicktime works well when I happen to use it.

Yes, it says "Safari 3 Public Beta" on the page, but they're treating it as finished :rolleyes:

As I said (and you completely ignored), they shouldn't be making it this public on their website when it has this many problems.

Yes, it says "Safari 3 Public Beta" on the page, but they're treating it as finished :rolleyes:

His point is that they are pushing to get a ton of people downloading it when it's obviously not ready. His comparison to how AOL handled the AIM 6.0 client is very accurate. They put it out there, but did so quietly. They knew that no beta is going to be too amazing and to sour a large unitiated audience before a final release would be extremely detrimental to the success of said product. Unfortunately, I'm not sure Apple could have such a quiet, low key beta, but they could have tried a little better.

As I said (and you completely ignored), they shouldn't be making it this public on their website when it has this many problems.
His point is that they are pushing to get a ton of people downloading it when it's obviously not ready. His comparison to how AOL handled the AIM 6.0 client is very accurate. They put it out there, but did so quietly. They knew that no beta is going to be too amazing and to sour a large unitiated audience before a final release would be extremely detrimental to the success of said product. Unfortunately, I'm not sure Apple could have such a quiet, low key beta, but they could have tried a little better.

They're not pushing anybody to download anything. It was a quick little thing during the keynote saying that they have a beta up and we could try it if we wanted. Just because it's not hidden away doesn't mean that it's being pushed to anybody like more than a beta. It's being advertised as what it is.

Well I uninstalled and reinstalled it, and I gotta say that suddenly it all makes sense now.

This must be another innovation from Apple - non-text browsing! Who needs text when you can have, uhh, err, nothing? It is the definition of minimalism! w00t!

post-135861-1181605335_thumb.png

(this POS really doesnt deserve to be on the apple front page, let alone anywhere on its website).

As I said (and you completely ignored), they shouldn't be making it this public on their website when it has this many problems.

Why not? Firefox is public and has had a memory leaking issue for decades? There's lots of **** out there that isn't suppose to be made public. Do I really have to remind you of Windows M.E.?

Who's telling you to download it? It's freeware, not MustHaveWare "OMFG I MUST GET IT OR SOMEONE WILL SHOOT ME!"

Well I uninstalled and reinstalled it, and I gotta say that suddenly it all makes sense now.

This must be another innovation from Apple - non-text browsing! Who needs text when you can have, uhh, err, nothing? It is the definition of minimalism! w00t!

(this POS really doesnt deserve to be on the apple front page, let alone anywhere on its website).

And should your PC be allowed on the internet? You can't even reinstall an app :rolleyes: Although I notice little differences on Neowin's layout, theres nothing even similar to what you're getting.

Yes, it is a beta, but being advertised right now on the front page of apple.com as "The Worlds Best Browser" is a pretty tall stretch of the imagination.

I have had it open for about 7 minutes, with three tabs (this page, apple.com homepage and google.com) and its using a whopping 180mb of memory.

Wa wa wa, yes people, I know it is a beta, but for the worlds best browser... it sure is ****

Why not? Firefox is public and has had a memory leaking issue for decades? There's lots of **** out there that isn't suppose to be made public. Do I really have to remind you of Windows M.E.?

Who's telling you to download it? It's freeware, not MustHaveWare "OMFG I MUST GET IT OR SOMEONE WILL SHOOT ME!"

I didn't say they shouldn't have made it public, but they certainly should have done it to a much lesser degree. Keynote is one thing, not everyone hears about that, but once you slap it on the Apple homepage, everyone is going to see it. And most people are going to say, hey its a beta, but if its on the Apple homepage it must be pretty far along in its development cycle. Memory leaks is one thing, but missing text and missing menus is a whole different level. That certainly doesn't deserve to be on the homepage or a feature in the download section.

Wow, Safari is not to bad. I haven't had any problems. Well, the font looks weird, but other than that, works great. Only 30 megs of ram (Opera right now is using 32, 1 tab each). The grey top is kinda ugly, but other than that, its not to bad. I kinda like it. Not sure if I will fully switch from Opera to this, but will have it try it some more before I make that choice.

As with Quicktime, never had a problem with it either. Don't use iTunes though.

Edit:

Oh, another problem with Safari, when you click on the address bar, it doesn't select all the text. I like to just click once on it, and start typing, now I have to highlight the text before typing a new url.

Spell check doesn't seem to work either...

Another thing is with links, the title property doesn't work...When hovering over the new posts, if the forum doesn't show the full title, I can't hover over the link to see the full title. Kinda annoying.

Edited by ncc50446
I didn't say they shouldn't have made it public, but they certainly should have done it to a much lesser degree. Keynote is one thing, not everyone hears about that, but once you slap it on the Apple homepage, everyone is going to see it. And most people are going to say, hey its a beta, but if its on the Apple homepage it must be pretty far along in its development cycle. Memory leaks is one thing, but missing text and missing menus is a whole different level. That certainly doesn't deserve to be on the homepage or a feature in the download section.

Do you even understand what a beta test is? This is to find all these bugs that people are experiencing right now. That's the whole point! Doing what they did will help find bugs faster and get it out in a fully stable condition faster.

what a bad public beta... firefox public betas are so stable compared to this thing.

I'm assuming you didn't start using Firefox betas until after 1.0, or even 2.0, right? If that's the case, you have no clue what you're talking about. If that isn't the case, then you have a really bad memory.

You can't even compare the current Firefox betas to this. Firefox betas have a stable base to work on, as opposed to Safari whose current beta is the first public build for Windows. I think these bugs are to be expected. Like I said earlier, I'm surprised I haven't run into all the issues that others have.

Do you even understand what a beta test is? This is to find all these bugs that people are experiencing right now. That's the whole point! Doing what they did will help find bugs faster and get it out in a fully stable condition faster.

They could have easily done it on a much smaller scale. There are many users who are going to download this and not understand why the whole thing barely works. That is why it should be a more limited release. And even in its current state, you feel it deserves to be called the worlds best browser?

Firefox betas have a stable base to work on, as opposed to Safari whose current beta is the first public build for Windows.

Yes! Do you honestly believe something with so many problems should be given to the masses and plastered everywhere? Not everyone is lkie the people on neowin. They are going to download it and freak out because nothing works and not understand why. There are different stages of Betas. You have Google's betas, which is something like Gmail that is almost perfect but stays in beta for reasons that I don't understand. Then you have this, which barely works. People don't understand the difference.

ok wtf where did the rest of my post go? Did Safari just ate it like the 90MB of RAM that it's eating righ tnow? I swear I had a rather lengthy post reviewing this thing.

And another thing, when you click the neowin buttons SUBMIT or PREVIEW, you don;'t know you've clicked them, the onmouseclick event probably didn't go off for some reason.

You're not alone. Safari threw away half of my post for no given reason.

They could have easily done it on a much smaller scale. There are many users who are going to download this and not understand why the whole thing barely works. That is why it should be a more limited release. And even in its current state, you feel it deserves to be called the worlds best browser?

No, but they can say whatever the **** they want to! It really doesn't matter because it's a browser.

Yes! Do you honestly believe something with so many problems should be given to the masses and plastered everywhere? Not everyone is lkie the people on neowin. They are going to download it and freak out because nothing works and not understand why. There are different stages of Betas. You have Google's betas, which is something like Gmail that is almost perfect but stays in beta for reasons that I don't understand. Then you have this, which barely works. People don't understand the difference.

Beta is beta, no matter what stage it's in, and the word beta pretty much guarantees bugs. Yes, this should be given to the masses to TEST it, hence the fact that it's called a public beta. And it's not plastered everywhere. Who the hell visits Apple's website for no reason, especially when using Windows? This is only going to get around by word-of-mouth, which is exactly how Firefox got around in its early days. I see nothing wrong with that.

My final thought on this topic is this: Apple should have contained this beta longer until it was farther along, or they should have conducted their beta testing on a smaller scale. It is certainly not ready to be considered public beta status. Just wait until newspapers publish articles about the beta and it circulates on the internet. We are going to have a very large amount of amateure computer users trying to use this beta who shouldn't be.

Edited by someguy03

WOW. I've been using Safari for a few hours now... of course I've used it at length before on friends computars...

but if you say you like it, you've got to be kidding. On Vista, this is really terrible compared with IE7.

Still, I'm very happy they're releasing this! Excellent example of how Apple products are mostly hype and no substance. Roflcopter.

WOW. I've been using Safari for a few hours now... of course I've used it at length before on friends computars...

but if you say you like it, you've got to be kidding. On Vista, this is really terrible compared with IE7.

Still, I'm very happy they're releasing this! Excellent example of how Apple products are mostly hype and no substance. Roflcopter.

Excellent example of how many posts on Neowin are mostly ignorance. Roflcopter.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Weirldy, in Texas the age of consent is 17, not 18.
    • DXVK generally performs better on Linux (using Wine/Proton) than on Windows. Because Linux utilizes highly optimized, open-source Vulkan drivers (like RADV/ACO) that were specifically built for AMD Radeon hardware, the translation of Direct3D 9/11 to Vulkan is highly efficient. But if you take the trouble to watch my video, you can see that there are also advantages for Nvidia users. You see that I run Assassin's Creed Odyssey on 4GB RAM and on an i3-3240. What do you think are the minimum system requirements for windows11? For CPU-based rendering, Linux is generally faster than windows11 by about 15% due to lighter background overhead and efficient kernel scheduling.
    • NetSpeedTray 1.3.2 by Razvan Serea NetSpeedTray is a lightweight, open-source Windows network monitor that shows live upload and download speeds directly on the Taskbar. Designed for efficiency, it quietly sits in the system tray, conserving CPU and battery with dynamic updates. It blends seamlessly with Windows 10/11, adapts to light/dark themes, and auto-positions to avoid overlaps. Features include accurate interface detection, customizable display, optional mini-graph, color coding, granular font and unit control, detailed per-interface history graphs, safe data management, and easy CSV export—bringing the network monitoring Windows forgot. NetSpeedTray key features: Lightweight & Efficient Runs quietly in your system tray without consuming resources. Features a "Dynamic Update Rate" that lowers refresh frequency when the network is idle to save CPU and battery life. Native Look & Feel Blends seamlessly with Windows 10/11 UI. Smart detection for light and dark taskbar themes ensures text is always visible. Intelligent & Adaptive Positioning Automatically finds empty space next to your system tray and shifts to make room for new icons, preventing overlaps. Seamless OS Integration Behaves like a native Windows component. Hides instantly with auto-hiding taskbar Hides when a fullscreen app is active Smart Network Monitoring Accurate by Default: Auto mode identifies your main internet connection and ignores noise from VPNs or virtual adapters. Easy Interface Selection: Switch effortlessly between Auto, All, or Selected network interfaces via intuitive radio buttons. Total Visual Customization Free Move Mode: Unlock and place the widget anywhere on your screen. Optional Mini-Graph: Real-time graph of recent network activity with adjustable opacity. Color Coding: Customize colors and speed thresholds to quickly see network status. Granular Display Control Text & Font: Adjust font family, size, weight, and alignment. Units: Automatic (B/s, KB/s, MB/s) or fixed Mbps display. Precision: Set decimal places and always show them for uniform appearance. Detailed & Intelligent History Graph Smart Scale: Logarithmic scale shows low-level traffic and large spikes clearly. Per-Interface Filtering: View speed history for specific adapters (Wi-Fi, Ethernet, VPN). Safe & Efficient Data Management: Adjustable retention, automatic cleanup, optimized database. Easy Data Export: Export raw data to .csv or save high-quality graphs for reports. NetSpeedTray v1.3.2: Smaller, Lighter, Better Multi-Monitor NetSpeedTray v1.3.2 focuses on being smaller, lighter, and more reliable, with major memory savings, better multi-monitor support, stronger privacy protections, and easier troubleshooting. Changes 24% smaller installer (106 → 81 MB) 28% smaller portable ZIP (127 → 91 MB) 45–70% lower idle RAM usage (~135 MB → ~40–75 MB) Preferred Monitor setting for multi-monitor setups (#72) Export Support Bundle for one-click bug-report packaging Live Windows Light/Dark theme detection (#62) Lazy loading of matplotlib & numpy for faster, lighter startup Improved multi-monitor widget position restore after reboot (#133) Windows 10/11 stylesheet and font compatibility fixes (#149) Support Bundle includes sanitized logs, config, and system info PII obfuscator hardened to cover IPv6, MACs, hostnames, GUIDs, and paths (#141) Unified log redaction across file and console logging Better diagnostic logging included by default in support bundles Korean translation improvements and updated translator credits (#139) Test suite expanded from 146 → 191 passing tests (+45) [full release notes] Download: NetSpeedTray 1.3.2 | 81.6 MB (Open Source) Download: NetSpeedTray Portable | 91.1 MB View: NetSpeedTray Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Reluctantly..bs. In this day and age(pun intended) information is more valuable then apps; big tech worked with the GOP and in dem states like California to add this crap so they can agro better marketing data.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Apprentice
      fernan99 went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • One Month Later
      nothanks earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      473
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      232
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      69
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      59
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!