On Monday, Apple Inc. launched beta version of Safari Web browser for Windows-based PCs, competing against the two popular browsers Internet Explorer and Mozilla’s Firefox. Safari is available on only Mac until now.
Like the other web browsers Safari for Windows free of cost. It can be downloaded from here.
It is an interesting move by Apple , and we will have to wait and see whether this will be able to pick up user base competing the most popular Internet Explorer and growing Firefox.
‘What we’ve got here is the most innovative browser in the world and the most powerful browser in the world,’ Apple CEO Steve Jobs said during his keynote speech at the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference.
‘Safari, which was released a few years ago for Apple’s Macintosh computers, has captured about 5 percent of the world’s browser market share with more than 18 million users’ Jobs said, ‘Internet Explorer, which is built into Windows, has a 78 percent share, while Firefox has rapidly climbed to gain about 15 percent of the market’.
Jobs claimed Safari performs twice as fast as its competitors.
I just have download it and installed it. It looks as good as it is on a Mac. But there were some reports of problems already just with in one day of the release.
If you have tried it, tell us about your experience too..
![]() | Read Reviews and Compare Prices on a Console or on Console Games, or if you are looking for a Mobile Phone, Portable MP3 Player or just want to organise yourself with a PDA. |
March 27th, 2008 21:03 GMT
I love safari! i had firefox and was having problems with pdfs and emails not sending. That is now all in the past. the only downfall I have found is there is no password manager. sxipper was really nice to have, but i guess i am just being lazy.
June 17th, 2007 13:00 GMT
I’m baffled as to why Apple would even try to compete in the browser field, but one of my astute pals thinks this is to attract content & app developers for the iPhone’s browser.
As for the whole speed thing, why the emphasis on load speed when the real bottleneck is rarely the browser, the OS, or the hardware - I’ve found that the broadband connection pipes and the content senders are much more likely to be the culprits if your browsing is sluggish.