Apple Safari

CNET Editors' review

The previous version of Safari for Windows dramatically changed the nature of the browser from something of an unfinished curiosity to an alternative with seriously quick chops. It lacked many of the customization features that define most other browsers, but certain unique default features, such as the visually impressive, Cover Flow-inspired Top Sites and history viewing, made it worth checking out for more users besides just browser enthusiasts and jaded reviewers.

Safari 5 is here!

Though Safari 5 continues the push for speed, able to surpass (by some tests) bleeding-edge JavaScript engines from Google and Opera, Apple continues to place feature development farther down the totem pole of importance. That doesn't mean that new features have been ignored. There's the new Reader option that streamlines how you read articles, broader support for HTML5, default support for searches on Bing, and performance improvements. However, the biggest new feature of them all--Extensions--won't be available until later this summer according to Apple, and depending on what you're looking for in a browser, Safari can be seen as lacking many helpful options.

Installation and setup
Safari 5 is easy to install, although the time it takes to run the installer feels longer than its major alterna-browser competitors of Firefox, Chrome, and Opera. It updates using the Apple Software Updater, which may opt you in to other Windows-based Apple programs when it detects an update. Safari does not come with an uninstaller, and so it must be removed using the default Windows Add/Remove Programs tool or a third-party remover.

Interface
Safari's interface hasn't changed much from Safari 4. Navigation remains on top in this version, with Back and Forward buttons, the location bar, the search box, current page menu, and preferences menu. Whereas both Safari and Chrome are based on WebKit, Safari has opted to keep its tabs below the navigation bar and retain its brushed gray interface. It will look the same on Windows XP or Windows 7, since there's no real support for Aero Glass. In many ways, it's not as minimal as Chrome or Opera, and feels a bit older because of it.

Go on a tour of Safari 5 (screenshots)

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The bookmarks bar appears by default just below the navigation bar, and on all but significantly older computers users should see links to show all bookmarks and show Top Sites on the left.

The status bar remains hidden by default, which would be acceptable if there was another way to view a link's URL before clicking on it. Chrome manages a small pop-up at the bottom of the browser, but since Safari doesn't, we recommend forcing the status bar to appear for safety reasons. It's never a good idea to click blindly on a link, and it's unfortunate that the default Safari encourages this behavior. The status bar can be forced to appear from the View option on the menu bar, which is also hidden by default. You can force show the menu bar at the top of the Preferences menu, or by hitting the Alt key.

Features and support
Safari 5 comes with a new way to look at paginated stories and galleries, some helpful lesser feature improvements, and the promise of Extensions. As noted earlier, though, Apple has decided to not include many options that Firefox, Opera, Internet Explorer, and even Safari's cousin Chrome have.

The official late summer street date for the new Extensions gallery leaves many questions up for debate. Apple has said that the new framework restricts which extensions can be installed to those that have been approved by Apple. It's not clear at this time if or how that system will be different from the add-on networks supported by Google's Chrome and Mozilla's Firefox, but given Apple's heavy hand in content control on the newly renamed iOS, it's not unreasonable to expect the company to take that approach as well with Safari Extensions.

The new Reader feature in Safari streamlines both single and multipage stories into a more legible format.

(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)

Apple has created a Safari Developer Program to guide, and perhaps curate, extension development, and to that end has allowed users to toggle on the Extensions menu from the Advanced tab under Preferences. This will add the Develop menu to the menu bar, from which you'll need to click on Enable Extensions. Extensions can be added from one of the unofficial Safari Extensions collections, and managed from the Extensions tab that should now appear in the Preferences windows. At the time this review was written, most extensions had been ported from Google Chrome since both browsers share the same rendering engine.

The most interesting new feature in Safari that's ready to use is the Reader button. This button appears at the right side of the location bar when you load a site with pagination, such as a multipage article or gallery. Hitting it will open an overlay window that combines all pages into a single, scrollable format and tints out the site beneath, including ads and other distractions. Any embedded pictures or videos remain viewable, although, like the text of the story, they lose their site-specific formatting in favor of the Reader's defaults. Reader also comes with five buttons at the bottom of the frame that appear only when you mouse over them. You can zoom in, zoom out, e-mail the page, or print the page in its Reader format.

Reader is a more limited version of the code used in the Readability bookmarklet. What's innovative about the Safari version is that Apple decided to include it at all, but because it's such an obvious feature to include in a Web browser, it wouldn't be surprising to see others follow suit. Besides reactivating formatting options such as font size, what's keeping this feature from being really impressive is a lack of sharing beyond e-mail. It'd be great if you could use it to immediately share an article on Twitter or Facebook.

HTML5 gets a lot of love in Safari 5, pushing the browser to the top of the list of HTML5 browser versions that aren't in beta or development. Safari now supports HTML5-based full-screen video playback, video closed captioning, geolocation, drag and drop, forms validation, HTML5 Ruby, EventSource, and WebSocket. But in an odd turn from Apple, the HTML5 demo Web site is restricted to Safari browsers only.

Apple hasn't activated Extensions in Safari officially, but it has provided you with a workaround.

(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)

Safari now comes with local searches enabled from the location bar, so as you type your query you can see how it relates to your history and bookmarks. However, there's still no location-bar-based Web search, something that Firefox, Chrome, and Opera have had for varying but lengthy amounts of time. Safari has also added Bing search to its default search engine options, but again, its competitors have allowed full search engine customization for a long time.

Although its search abilities may not be up to par with the competition, Safari has begun to introduce a modicum of tab customization. The Tab window in Preferences gives you far more customizations than before, including opening into a new tab, some control over the tab focus on new tabs, and confirmation before closing multiple tabs. Safari 5 does not offer a session manager; it also doesn't natively respect your default browser for opening links. To change this, you'll need to go to the General tab under Preferences and change the default Web browser setting.

These deficiencies certainly won't kill Safari, but they're odd ones to leave out.

Performance
Safari's performance has definitely been improved, and it remains the browser's strongest selling point, in part because of the hardware acceleration (only in the Windows version, read more about hardware acceleration here) and DNS prefetching. Part of that is because of the improvements made to the Nitro JavaScript engine.

On Windows, users get the visual indicators for multiple tabs, but there's still no support for jump lists or recently viewed sites.

(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)

On a Windows 7 x86, running on an Intel Core 2 Duo T9400 at 2.53GHz, with 3GB of RAM, Safari notched an average of 465.5 milliseconds over three cold-boot runs on the SunSpider JavaScript test. The current stable version of Chrome released today, version 5.0.375.70, scored 525.19 ms. The disparity between the Mac versions was far greater. On a Mac OS X 10.6.3, running on the same Intel chip as the Windows 7 computer but with 4GB of RAM, Safari 5 completed the SunSpider tests in 351.7 ms. Google Chrome took 498.67 ms. Though the developer's version of Chrome comes in at 356.9 ms on the Windows 7 computer, indicating that Safari's benchmarks can be not only achieved but surpassed, Safari's the only stable public version with these numbers.

Conclusion
Speed is important, but it's not the only judge of a good browser. With the exception of the unique Reader feature, Safari 5 does more to bring Apple's browser into line with other browsers than actually trailblazing, and even with the improvements made to this version, Safari still lacks many of the small but useful features competitors offer. For raw JavaScript speed, Safari is at the head of the pack for now, but Apple's focus on other user needs remains less than exemplary.

Safari 4 for Windows and Mac:

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All User Reviews
  • All versions:

    3.1 stars

    out of 760 votes

    • 5 star: 197
    • 4 star: 158
    • 3 star: 128
    • 2 star: 96
    • 1 star: 181
  • Current version:

    2.9 stars

    out of 32 votes

    • 5 star: 2
    • 4 star: 10
    • 3 star: 10
    • 2 star: 4
    • 1 star: 6
  • My rating:

    0 stars

    Write review

Results 1-10 of 32

  • 4.0 stars

    "Good, but..."

    July 29, 2010  |   By Mitcheddar

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Safari offers a web-browsing interface that should be familiar if you are an iTunes user. The browsing experience is fast, and it brings fun features like Reader and a Cover Flow search that brings a classic Apple flare.

    Cons

    Even though the newest version brings extensions to it's arsenal (finally), it's official selection is limited. Also, if you are running Safari on Windows XP, the browser itself might be slow to respond and freeze.

    Summary

    Go for this browser if you don't mind a limited extension gallery and you use Vista, 7, of OS X. If you are using XP, don't try it: you will be disappointed.

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  • 2.0 stars

    "Not yet ready for release"

    July 20, 2010  |   By matthewdm

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Very nice features, good look interface, fast loading, unintrusive

    Cons

    Unstable and tends to "detach" itself from Vista. The Adobe vs. Apple can be seen here with all the flash problems. Crashes, freezes. Really not at all ready for release.

    Summary

    I have used and liked Safari in the past -- easy interface, good features, easy to use, relatively stable. But then this came out. I quickly became frustrated.

    When I took it for an initial spin, it worked great. Sprang up quickly, loaded pages at great speed, visually appealing... five stars. Then, I decided to load in what I need to do my work -- Abode Flash Player -- and attach it to my taskbar in Windows 7. Then the bugs became apparent. Clicking on the compass in the taskbar causes a new compass to pop up in the taskbar (as in, the pinned one stays "inactive," and a new one pops up), which was fixed by ridding the taskbar of the old and pinning the new. Okay, not that big of a problem. But, when using Adobe Flash, the program tends to quit, freeze, crash, the whole nine yards when running more than one tab with flash in it. Steve Jobs may say that it's all Adobe's fault, but I've never had that trouble with Firefox, or heck, even IE. Then, I decide to download some things from Microsoft's site. And guess what? I can't! Every singe time I try to download something, it stops as it is almost completed, and the whole program goes down. Same deal on THREE fresh install computers and one not-freshly installed computer.

    Overall, I think the techs at apple need to give this code a few more rewrites.

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  • 3.0 stars

    "Much better version"

    July 20, 2010  |   By emekaojiegbe

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Faster with better layout

    Cons

    Improved response to site call-ups

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  • 3.0 stars

    "Got some nice visual features. No biggy, actually."

    July 19, 2010  |   By WaArSe

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Looks good.
    Can be faster than Opera or even Chrome.

    Cons

    Does not make any real difference while browsing.
    The tabbed interface has to be activated.
    Couldn't get to several sites I use frequently.

    Summary

    It's a browser with some nice visuals.
    I would not recommend it, but would not rejct it either.
    I guess some people will like much more than I did.

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  • 4.0 stars

    "Still the fastest browser!"

    July 13, 2010  |   By TheMrL2010

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    +Very fast (fastest browser out there)
    +Easy to use
    +Nice font smoothing
    +Extensions (finally)
    +Top sites

    Cons

    -No themes
    -Crashes sometimes
    -Not the most compatible browser

    Summary

    Overall Safari is the fastest browser you will come across. It's improving each version, more and more. It's personally my favourite browser. Definitely worth a download.

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  • 4.0 stars

    "was a nice surprise"

    July 2, 2010  |   By master_mind413

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    was not expecting much but it came as a very nice surprise its quick its stable and it beats the hell out of opera even the new the one I love the start page "speed dial" that is more like an cool iris then a speed dial

    Cons

    some times slow but most of the time not can be sketchy glitchy" but its seems minor so far

    Summary

    I like it I think im going to keep it

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  • 4.0 stars

    "A custom style mod for Safari 5?s Reader"

    July 1, 2010  |   By Munjeet

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Apple Safari Reader is a first amongst browsers and there is a reported improvement in overall performance including improved HTML 5 support.

    Cons

    The styling used in Reader by default does not suit modern tastes, so I have modified this and made it available for others to download at http://www.munjeet.com/comment/apple-safari-reader/

    Summary

    Installing this custom style mod for Safari 5?s Reader feature will give a far more readable plain white background, cool grey Helvetica or sans-serif font with basic styling to support headlines tables and a clean scrollbar amongst others. Instructions on how to install and screenshots can be found at http://www.munjeet.com/comment/apple-safari-reader/

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  • 1.0 stars

    "This safari ends up nowhere"

    June 27, 2010  |   By Harl A Quin

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Nice looking

    Cons

    Unstable, crashes pretty much all the time. Doesn't uninstall cleanly, leaves bits of info on the hard drive.

    Summary

    If you want a nice, webkit based browser stick with Chrome.

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  • 1.0 stars

    "Download was terminal for Safari net access."

    June 26, 2010  |   By DyerRL

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    Safari pros cannot yet be determined.

    Cons

    Following download Safari would not open web pages. Safari would open showing typical menu icons, however, when attempting to connect with any web page the screen remained blank.

    Summary

    We are searching for a method to recover from download problem. Without Safari being available the research to do so is difficult....will provide further evaluation upon recovery.

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  • 3.0 stars

    "Better than previous version, not as good as Chrome 5"

    June 24, 2010  |   By armwood

    Version: Apple Safari 5.0.7533.16

    Pros

    It has the Mac software elegance at least in the Mac version. The Windows version is not as pretty. It is faster than the previous version and supports extensions. It is useful for advance Mac users who use a lot of Applescripts.

    Cons

    Seems a little clunky on Mac as compared to Chrome 5, not as many extensions available yet, no themes, not as fast ast Crome 5

    Summary

    I find Chrome 5 to be a significantly more flexible and usable browser for the Mac than Safari 5. I really wanted to like this new version of Safari better than Chrome. I generally really like Mac software. I used Safari 5 a lot but I kept on missing Chrome 5 as I used Safari 5.

    I have used the latest versions of both programs since both of their launch dates. I find that simple things like highlighting a url for blogging purposes, as an example is much easier in Chrome 5. Wherever you click in the chrome 5 url bar the entire address will highlight unlike in Safari 5 where you have to be very careful where you place your cursor. I blog a lot. This small issue can be very annoying. Chrome allows favicons in the tool bookmark bar which really saves a lot of bar real estate, allowing more visible links. The Chrome extension gallery is large, I felt no loss pangs here when I ditched FireFox upon Chrome for Mac's release from Beta. I can find absolutely no speed advantage for Safari that is noticeable while browsing the web. Both browsers are very fast. I find Chrome's implementation of tabs to be more easily accessible than Safari's implementation. Safari does not support themes.

    In conclusion my major reason for crowning Chrome 5 king of the Mac browser kingdom is its basic usability. Try it out for yourself. Try some extensions in both browsers like Shareaholic. The Chrome extension trounces the Safari implementation. On the other hand Abile software's sophisticated implementation of its Safari 5 extension is far superior to the beta version available for Chrome. Abile Software really needs to work on this extension since so many Mac users use their product.


    Compare both browsers, come to your own conclusions.

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Results 1-10 of 32

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