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Apple safari windows
Apple safari windows






This isn’t a bad way to do things, but it does restrict the number of first level groupings for your bookmarks. There’s no bookmark palette down the left-hand side of the screen, but instead a bookmark bar can be turned on, running horizontally across the top of the page pane. It’s a shame, though, that the tabs you create are not remembered between sessions, as they are in Firefox 2. You can also pull any open tab off the tab bar and it opens as an extra instance of Safari. Tabs work as they do in the latest versions of Internet Explorer and Firefox, but can also be reordered by dragging and dropping. The main screen is deceptively simple, with a menu bar, address bar and set of tabs along the top. It installs simply enough and you have the choice of installing QuickTime as well as the browser. It’s available free, in its first public beta, from the Apple site and Apple claims over one million copies have been downloaded in its first 48 hours. Safari for Windows is claimed to be much faster than other Windows-based browsers and to offer significant new features. Safari is the most popular browser on the Mac, but this is hardly surprising, as it’s bundled with every new machine in the same way Internet Explorer is bundled with Windows. We have Internet Explorer 7 and Firefox 2, with Opera and Netscape in the wings, so what’s so hot about Safari? There’s no similarly compelling reason for an Internet Explorer user to switch to an alternative browser.

apple safari windows

However, there’s a pressing reason for a Windows Media Player user to run iTunes, that reason being the iPod.

apple safari windows

#Apple safari windows software

Having bubbled on about how much better the software is that’s supplied with a Mac, Apple has decided to offer some of it on the platform of its market-leading rival it has released the Safari Internet browser for Windows.Īfter the success of iTunes for Windows, there’s clear logic in offering Safari for the OS too. The benighted PC manikin played by Dave Mitchell in Apple’s recent ads must be thinking Robert Webb’s Mac is having yet another coy giggle.






Apple safari windows