Apple Safari to be released for the Windows Platform!


Recommended Posts

People are going to see "World's Best Browser" and expect something, regardless of the fact that it says beta. Period.

It was (and still is for me) the best browser on the mac. They just ported it to Windows so of course they'll run into trouble with that.

People are going to see "World's Best Browser" and expect something, regardless of the fact that it says beta. Period.

Once again, that's ignorance. Beta is beta, period.

If people believe whatever a company says about their own product, that's pure ignorance. I would hope that by now most people knew that every company hypes up their products and in many cases says they're the best at whatever they do. That's completely normal, and I hope that people no longer believe such things right off the bat and instead try the products first.

It was (and still is for me) the best browser on the mac. They just ported it to Windows so of course they'll run into trouble with that.

Well yes it has proven itself on the mac, but it has yet to prove itself on the windows platform. Until then, it shouldn't be given that label.

And to gigapixels, there are so many degrees of "beta", as I believe I said before. Some are ready to be shown off to the world, some are not.

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.

buddy... i've been using firefox since it first came out 0.x builds, and i had no problems with it. Many of the betas i've used have been really stable with a few glitches now and then.

no you cannot say a beta is a beta. betas should have some degree of stability. read what has happened. people cannot display pages, cannot install, cant get safari to work. this is not a beta (quality wise). this public beta is like an alpha stage. heck even firefox 3.0a1 was more stable than this bloated thing.

"beta is a beta" - you are in denial my friend

Thank god they released this. Its going to be easier to test for Safari compatibility at work. We don't to buy an Apple computer anymore just for testing webpages.

I find that "1.6x faster than Ffx, twice as fast as IE" funny though. Apple has got the ratios wrong. This is much slower than IE and Firefox.

buddy... i've been using firefox since it first came out 0.x builds, and i had no problems with it. Many of the betas i've used have been really stable with a few glitches now and then.

no you cannot say a beta is a beta. betas should have some degree of stability. read what has happened. people cannot display pages, cannot install, cant get safari to work. this is not a beta (quality wise). this public beta is like an alpha stage. heck even firefox 3.0a1 was more stable than this bloated thing.

I never had too many problems either, but just because you and I didn't, doesn't mean they weren't there. There were random problems, just like for this Safari beta.

And seriously, stop bringing up the current Firefox alphas/betas. They have a stable codebase, whereas this is the first public Safari for Windows build. The codebase is still being stabilized.

Wow. Really, Wow. Safari is very nice. It's far faster at loading and rendering web pages to Microsoft's Internet Explorer 7 under Vista. Far far faster. I still love my Firefox but Safari is now my #2 browser, followed by Opera and IE is #4, it's a shocker. Good work Apple! Thanks Mr Jobs. (Y)

I never had too many problems either, but just because you and I didn't, doesn't mean they weren't there. There were random problems, just like for this Safari beta.

And seriously, stop bringing up the current Firefox alphas/betas. They have a stable codebase, whereas this is the first public Safari for Windows build. The codebase is still being stabilized.

If you go on the Firefox website, you do not see any sign of the Firefox 3.0 beta's at all on the homepage. Why? Because Mozilla doesn't want millions of people downloading a product that isn't ready for wide release. If 3.0 was all over the Firefox homepage, stupid people who don't understand beta's and testing are going to download Firefox 3.0 and get screwed over when they can't figure out why nothing works. It is common knowledge that if you are going to slap your beta on the front of your website, it must be pretty far done. Ask any geek. You said yourself that Firefox is more stable than Safari, and if Mozilla 3.0 isn't ready to be given out to the whole world, then Safari certainly is not.

Well yes it has proven itself on the mac, but it has yet to prove itself on the windows platform. Until then, it shouldn't be given that label.

Come on, you know yourself that the majority of Apple users are Safari users as well--it's mine and many others' best option on that platform so of course they would label it as that. The Windows beta seems more like a tryout than anything else.

Quote from Steve himself(http://www.engadget.com/2007/06/11/steve-jobs-live-from-wwdc-2007/): "It's a free beta, apple.com/safari and who knows, maybe we can grow our Safari share in the future, we can sure try."

If you go on the Firefox website, you do not see any sign of the Firefox 3.0 beta's at all on the homepage. Why? Because Mozilla doesn't want millions of people downloading a product that isn't ready for wide release. If 3.0 was all over the Firefox homepage, stupid people who don't understand beta's and testing are going to download Firefox 3.0 and get screwed over when they can't figure out why nothing works. It is common knowledge that if you are going to slap your beta on the front of your website, it must be pretty far done. Ask any geek. You said yourself that Firefox is more stable than Safari, and if Mozilla 3.0 isn't ready to be given out to the whole world, then Safari certainly is not.

Because Firefox currently has a mainstream release out! Before 1.0, when all they had were 0.x betas, they WERE on the home page, just like what Apple is doing with Safari now. Once again, don't compare the current Firefox alphas/betas to what is happening with Safari right now.

I'm very underwhelmed... On XP at the office it doesn't work at all. No fonts are displayed... you can't type in it. It's totally broken. At home on Vista it looks pretty I suppose but crashed immediately upon going to a Flash site and lots of times I would have to forcibly refresh things to get anything to show at all. This is remarkably poor quality for a Beta. If they called it an Alpha I'd feel much better about it.

Because Firefox currently has a mainstream release out! Before 1.0, when all they had were 0.x betas, they WERE on the home page, just like what Apple is doing with Safari now. Once again, don't compare the current Firefox alphas/betas to what is happening with Safari right now.

There is a difference between the builds that you find in the "nightly builds" folder on a server and the builds you find published on the front of a website. When firefox alpha's/betas were out, the entire world didn't know about it. I bet almost no one knew what it was. But everyone knows about Apple, and everyone is going to hear about Safari on Windows.

Because Firefox currently has a mainstream release out! Before 1.0, when all they had were 0.x betas, they WERE on the home page, just like what Apple is doing with Safari now. Once again, don't compare the current Firefox alphas/betas to what is happening with Safari right now.

What if we compare this to Phoenix 0.1?

Or Mozilla M1?

You know, if someone's making a browser, the least it should do is render a frikkin webpage! If it can't render a webpage, what good is it? That's all I'm saying!

There is a difference between the builds that you find in the "nightly builds" folder on a server and the builds you find published on the front of a website. When firefox alpha's/betas were out, the entire world didn't know about it. I bet almost no one knew what it was. But everyone knows about Apple, and everyone is going to hear about Safari on Windows.

And how exactly is everyone going to hear about this? Word of mouth, right? And perhaps the random person that decided to vista Apple's website (which is even more random on Windows). That's is exactly how people heard about Phoenix when it was first being developed.

By the way, where are you getting nightly builds from? I never brought that up, and I was referring to the builds linked to on Mozilla.org's homepage when Phoenix was being developed.

Why don't you try going to Yahoo! News and going to the technology section. Because you know..no one reads that. and I am betting this will be published in local newspapers.

I'm going to with GP02X and say that this should be called an Alpha, not a beta.

And I am saying that the quality of Apple's product is somethign that deserves to be on a nightly builds section and not on the front of a website (or they can stick it on the front of their website, but they shoudl call it an alpha).

Edited by someguy03
What if we compare this to Phoenix 0.1?

Or Mozilla M1?

You know, if someone's making a browser, the least it should do is render a frikkin webpage! If it can't render a webpage, what good is it? That's all I'm saying!

I'm sure there were plenty of people with the same issue on the first public Mozilla or Phoenix builds. But there were plenty of people that didn't have that issue, and don't with Safari, such as myself. BETA.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Unofficial script lets you install unreleased Windows 11 features without Microsoft Account by Sayan Sen Microsoft has been steadily evolving the Windows Insider Program over the years, introducing new channels and testing paths that allow enthusiasts to experience upcoming and yet-to-be-released Windows features (some interesting hidden ones too) before they reach the public. However, one long-standing requirement has remained largely unchanged as users are generally expected to enroll in the Program and with a Microsoft account. That's where a third-party tool called "OfflineInsiderEnroll" can help. OfflineInsiderEnroll is said to be a lightweight script that enables access to Windows Insider Program builds on systems that are not signed in with a Microsoft account. Essentially the tool configures the necessary Insider settings locally and hence allows users to select and switch between available preview channels while continuing to receive builds through the normal Windows Update channel. If you are wondering how it manages to do so, it is made possible by a Registry value known as TestFlags. When configured to"0x20", Windows stops communicating with Microsoft's online Insider enrollment services thus preventing locally configured Insider settings from being overwritten. This allows the script to apply its own channel configuration directly through the Registry as Windows Update does not verify whether a device has been officially enrolled in the Insider Program or not. Previously the utility has had already supported the traditional Insider branches including Dev, Beta, and Release Preview. However following Microsoft’s recent restructuring of its preview channels, the script has now been updated. The latest OfflineInsiderEnroll version, 2.6.6, adds support for the newly introduced Insider channel lineup. As such, users can now choose from several Experimental channels in addition to Beta and Release Preview options. The update also retains tools for refreshing the Insider cache, resetting Insider settings, and completely stopping Insider enrollment when needed. Keep in mind though that will need elevated privileges when running the script (run as Admin). You can get the latest version of OfflineInsiderEnroll from this page on its official GitHub repo.
    • The "Classic" Outlook has done that for a few years as well. The option to even change that is really hidden away too... It really shouldn't be hard to respect user defaults. Sadly we are the product now, not Outlook. To change in the Classic Outlook: File > Options > Advanced > change "Open hyperlinks from Outlook in"
    • Get yo ass to space
    • Vivaldi 8.0.4033.44 is out.
    • For the purpose that it was built for, it’s a great machine. It’s okay to own multiple machines, it’s okay for machines to be different. If every computer was the same, they’d be boring af.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Collaborator
      Asgardi earned a badge
      Collaborator
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      474
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      249
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      67
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      60
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!