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Is Safari the New Internet Explorer?

An anonymous reader writes: Software developer Nolan Lawson says Apple's Safari has taken the place of Microsoft's Internet Explorer as the major browser that lags behind all the others. This comes shortly after the Edge Conference, where major players in web technologies got together to discuss the state of the industry and what's ahead. Lawson says Mozilla, Google, Opera, and Microsoft were all in attendance and willing to talk — but not Apple.

"It's hard to get insight into why Apple is behaving this way. They never send anyone to web conferences, their Surfin' Safari blog is a shadow of its former self, and nobody knows what the next version of Safari will contain until that year's WWDC. In a sense, Apple is like Santa Claus, descending yearly to give us some much-anticipated presents, with no forewarning about which of our wishes he'll grant this year. And frankly, the presents have been getting smaller and smaller lately."

He argues, "At this point, we in the web community need to come to terms with the fact that Safari has become the new IE. Microsoft is repentant these days, Google is pushing the web as far as it can go, and Mozilla is still being Mozilla. Apple is really the one singer in that barbershop quartet hitting all the sour notes, and it's time we start talking about it openly instead of tiptoeing around it like we're going to hurt somebody's feelings."

311 comments

  1. Already covered over at Hacker News by carlhaagen · · Score: 5, Funny

    The unisonous response is "no". The author is trying to balance the needle on its tip.

    1. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You and I must have read a different Hacker News thread because the opinions seemed pretty divided in both directions. That seems to suggest there's plenty of developers feeling this pain.

    2. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0
      Also, OP's

      Google is pushing the web as far as it will go

      is just plain BS. Google is pushing the web where Google wants it to go, and that is neither near its capability or, if you just ask people, very close to WHERE it wants to go.

      I dumped Chrome a long time ago, for very good reasons (bloated, slow, Google-centric) and even if they've improved those things, it's still not good enough. No thanks.

    3. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by arth1 · · Score: 2

      You and I must have read a different Hacker News thread because the opinions seemed pretty divided in both directions.

      That is consistent with trying to balance a needle on its tip.

      But Betteridge's Law of Headlines has already answered the question.
      The problem is in the very premise. Safari never had anything remotely similar to IEs marketshare. Nor the corporate glue. It's silly to even try to compare what happes with the two over time.
      IE was a major enabler and roadblock. Safari was never significant enough to even stub your toe on.

    4. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well actually. All iphone's? Are they allowed to install chrome or firefox ? It's not an android size markt, but it's a markt of people with money...

    5. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah the wail and mental gymnastics of the fanboy...

    6. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bingo.

      There is nothing on an apple platform that requires Safari. There are a few API's that developers can use that will use part of Safari (namely iTunes, and various iPhone "webapps") but these are applications where the goalposts aren't being moved by updates to Safari unlike MSIE.

      MSIE's bugbears:
      - ActiveX, oh for the love of ****... ActiveX is and always was a proprietary Microsoft thing along with...
      - VBScript, which wasn't used quite as much outside of corporate interests.

      These two things alone "tied" developers to MSIE with nowhere else to go.

      Safari on the other hand, if you write a webapp, you can still use that same damn webapp on an Android device that doesn't have Safari. Websites that were designed around Safari, work equally well in Chrome.

    7. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by PitaBred · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What do you mean? Every single web view on iOS uses Safari's renderer. It's against the App Store rules to have your own renderer. The problem is that sure, if you design a website around Safari it'll work everywhere else, but it's a pain in the ass to design it to a 5 year old standard when all the other major browsers support other upgrades, extensions and capabilities that can make code easier/faster/better. It's most apparent when an open standard has replaced an Apple designed one that's inferior, and Apple refuses to change, such as WebSQL/IndexedDB.

    8. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

      What do you mean? Every single web view on iOS uses Safari's renderer. It's against the App Store rules to have your own renderer. The problem is that sure, if you design a website around Safari it'll work everywhere else, but it's a pain in the ass to design it to a 5 year old standard when all the other major browsers support other upgrades, extensions and capabilities that can make code easier/faster/better. It's most apparent when an open standard has replaced an Apple designed one that's inferior, and Apple refuses to change, such as WebSQL/IndexedDB.

      Like I/E used to force you to do. Write for them and then write for everybody else that was current.

    9. Re:Already covered over at Hacker News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well actually. All iphone's? Are they allowed to install chrome or firefox ?

      Yes.

      Next, it’s your turn to mutter something about Webkit.

  2. hit one sour note by turkeydance · · Score: 5, Funny

    and most won't notice. hit two and they do. hit three, that's jazz.

    1. Re:hit one sour note by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hit four, and they tune to another radio station.

    2. Re:hit one sour note by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Weird analogy to choose for this summary. Weirder that the next 5 days the top barbershop quartets in the world will be vying to be awarded
      "International Champion". (http://www.barbershop.org/pittsburgh/)

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  3. New internet explorer by Dan+East · · Score: 5, Funny

    If Safari is the new internet explorer then that's not bad. If Safari is the old internet explorer then that's really bad.

    --
    Better known as 318230.
    1. Re:New internet explorer by ArcadeMan · · Score: 5, Funny

      Your comment is quite Edgy.

    2. Re:New internet explorer by MrKaos · · Score: 0

      If Safari is the new internet explorer then that's not bad. If Safari is the old internet explorer then that's really bad.

      If only enough people that mattered used Safari. Deploying an enterprise based web application using Safari the way dependency on IE6 was created is unlikely to happen again.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    3. Re:New internet explorer by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

      If only enough people that mattered used Safari.

      You mean other than CxOs and VPs that carry an iPhone and/or iPad?

    4. Re:New internet explorer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mobile safari isn't safari. It's safari's retarded little brother.

    5. Re:New internet explorer by MrKaos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If only enough people that mattered used Safari.

      You mean other than CxOs and VPs that carry an iPhone and/or iPad?

      No I mean accountants and ERP users that actually use applications in the enterprise. C-levels and VPs are a very small group of users, important, but only if you are managing stakeholder expectations.

      Oh and I can see the fanbois are out modding again and taking everything personally.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    6. Re:New internet explorer by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      If only enough people that mattered used Safari.

      You mean other than CxOs and VPs that carry an iPhone and/or iPad?

      They don't matter in terms of numbers.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    7. Re:New internet explorer by praxis · · Score: 1

      No, but they tend to have more influence than most individuals, hence being a good reply to 'enough people that mattered', with emphases on the word 'mattered'.

    8. Re:New internet explorer by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      But if things don't work right for them, they have the power to force them to. Thereby forcing standards to the lowest common denominator, ie Safari, just like happened with IE6.

    9. Re:New internet explorer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Safari has always been the old IE. Website never seem to work right when they work find in all the others. But it is Apple so I am wrong.

    10. Re:New internet explorer by vought · · Score: 2

      "Oh and I can see the fanbois are out modding again and taking everything personally."

      Been here long?

    11. Re:New internet explorer by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      Considering the article, it sounds like regular Safari is also retarded, so would this make the mobile version even more retarded?

  4. Re:People still use Safari? by carlhaagen · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes.

  5. Good News by Luthair · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No corporations support it so there is no reason for most of the world to bother supporting it unlike IE.

    1. Re:Good News by randallman · · Score: 2

      And "supporting" IE was one of the biggest mistakes ever. They're now living with their bug ridden apps that only work on IE6 with ActiveX. It takes a little more work, but programming to standards isn't THAT hard.

  6. Presents... by msauve · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Apple is like Santa Claus, descending yearly to give us some much-anticipated presents, with no forewarning about which of our wishes he'll grant this year."

    Here's a lump of coal. You'll like it. We'll send you the bill later.

    (Apple has always been like that - they Think Different)

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Presents... by NotDrWho · · Score: 0

      Here's a lump of coal. You'll like it. We'll send you the bill later.

      And the lump of coal will retail for $2,000, idiot Apple fans will line up around the block to buy it at launch, and Wired will feature 25 stories on how it's going to revolutionize the world.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  7. This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problems with IE were twofold:

    1) It contained tons of rendering bugs that websites relied upon, and so Microsoft's refusal to fix them assured the browser's market dominance by making pages render improperly in competitors' browsers.
    2) It was completely insecure.

    Safari does not do either of these things.

    1. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Safari does not do either of these things.

      Ah the RDF.

      1. There is plenty of safari-specific CSS that renders improperly in competitors' browsers (the same is true of IE, Chrome and Firefox as well). Back in the late 90s/early 00s the problem was you do things the IE way or the Netscape way, many of which were non-standard. Nowadays browsers still introduce their own extensions and ways of doing things with different quirks hence the safari/webkit/chrome/ie/etc CSS prefixes.

      2. Here you will find pages and pages disproving you.

      Note: All the browsers have such problems, not just Safari. Just calling you out on your false idea that Safari doesn't suffer the problems of other browsers. The point of this article is that Safari is becoming the new IE in the sense that with respect to industry collaboration they are behaving like Microsoft did with early IE. Try not to extrapolate beyond that.

    2. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft's refusal to fix them

      And if they fixed them, people will say all their sites are now broken, don't update internet explorer.

    3. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There is no safari prefix. There is only -webkit that targets safari, as well as chrome (unless there's some -blink prefix I haven't run across). There's no such thing as safari specific css.

      To my mind, the one running off with the ball here is Google. Forking webkit so they could add new features (read: fragmentation) was a crappy move for everyone except Google. Now they can do what they want, without worrying about standards or parity and introduce the very real possibility of undoing much of the work that has been done to level the playing field with respect to web standards.

      Maybe apple's guilty of moving slow, but at least they're not willfully breaking shit.

    4. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In fact, the situation is so terrible with webkit-specific prefixes that Explorer has already implemented their own versions, and Firefox is following suit. It's a sad, sad time, since we're probably going to have to have a formal specification for the quirks of Safari's terrible prefixes, just because Apple pulled a Microsoft and flooded the web with half-baked ideas just to try to gain a competitive edge... and now they're way behind everyone else. When Microsoft and Firefox have gone from being antiquated to competitive in the span of a few years, it's really sad to see the company that took a stand against Flash looking so utterly pathetic now.

    5. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Safari has plenty of problems. It doesn't support anything other than safari for one. Try installing an ad blocker or a video plugin. Does. Not. Work. I especially hate browsing 4chan on my iPad since none of the .webm's play. Safari on iOS however further compounds these problems, since you CANNOT USE ANOTHER BROWSER. Fuckin annoys the hell out of me. A real shame too since the actual hardware for the air2 is so good. I will probably get a surface4 or something next time... I tried Apple just once, since they had such a brilliant piece of hardware, and the software truly ruined it.

    6. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no such thing as safari specific css.

      Are you really going to pretend you don't know what I mean? Strictly speaking there isn't really IE specific css either since despite the name the engine is trident and any trident css (whatever it is named) also targets Chrome or Firefox browsers (not just IE) that are running the IETab extension. Yes you can make this convoluted and pretend you don't understand if you like but you know what I mean. There are many different hacks for all browsers to get around the fact all browsers do some things a bit differently.

      To my mind, the one running off with the ball here is Google. Forking webkit so they could add new features (read: fragmentation) was a crappy move for everyone except Google.

      So your suggestion is that Google just sit on their hands and stay behind with Apple while other vendors forge ahead implementing new features in the hope that one day Apple will get their shit together? That's a very Apple-centric view of the world.

      Now they can do what they want

      It is no different to the way it was.

      but at least they're not willfully breaking shit.

      As opposed to who?

    7. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Adding your own experimental CSS extensions that do not render in other browsers is a bit different from implementing the CSS standard different from what the standard says.

    8. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      2) It was completely insecure.

      Safari does not do either of these things.

      I'm sure there are others commenting rendering part, but I'd like to object to this. There are several security problems in Safari which should not be there in 2015. For example Safari is the only major browser in which all mixed content (yes, all) is loaded in secure pages without giving any notice to user or giving an ability to configure the behavior.

    9. Re:This is a big troll by SilenceBE · · Score: 2

      Browser specific prefixes are a nuisance - which can easily be overcome by using sass/less - but you can't compare it with what I remembered from the IE6 era.

      People who are making that comparison clearly haven't witnessed that period as a web developer. There were other problems than CSS prefixes. You had the IE way and then the rest. You had progress and then you had Microsoft dragging its feet with IE.

      Yes Apple is not as fast as picking up new stuff as their competitors, but it is a whole other league then deliberately trying to take the web as a hostage. They catch up eventually and at a faster pace then what Microsoft was doing in the web's dark ages.

    10. Re:This is a big troll by Merk42 · · Score: 1

      Faster than the 90s, sure, but "once a year we'll maybe update our browser with a handful of things that mostly don't do with web standards" is too slow for 2015.

    11. Re:This is a big troll by Pascal+Sartoretti · · Score: 1

      There is plenty of safari-specific CSS that renders improperly in competitors' browsers

      So what ? Just don't use it.

      As long as Safari implements the HTML+CSS specs, that's fine with me. This was definitely not the case with Internet Explorer

    12. Re:This is a big troll by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      I guess they aren't aware of WebKit ...

      And if I Blink a few times ... I can probably think of some relatives of it as well.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    13. Re: This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tbtf

    14. Re:This is a big troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Safari does do both of these things." There fixed it for ya.

  8. Chrome is the new IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think Chrome is closer to the new IE. It has lots of problems, developers code specifically for it and it causes all sorts of development headaches. Not enough people use Safari for it to be an issue.

    1. Re:Chrome is the new IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You clearly are thinking with desktop-coloured glasses. Despite Android market penetration, Safari is clearly the dominant force in the world of mobile websites, to an even greater degree than Chrome is dominant in desktop websites (and yes, I recognize that's true).

      Couple that with some really backwards things, like support for touch-events over pointer-events (http://mobiforge.com/news-comment/who-wants-pointer-events-api-everyone-nearly). Key advantage of pointer-events is that it is declarative/reactive instead of imperative/synchronous, and as such it is more responsive on low-end devices.

      The thesis of this discussion is that not only are developers coding to Safari, but Safari development is closed (despite an open-source platform) and obstinately at odds with the overall standardization process. It pins part of the blame on bitterness over WebSQL vs. IndexedDB, which I have no real knowledge about so no comment.

  9. Flamebait article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Besides no one uses Apple any more. :)

  10. Wow, someone posted an opinion on their blog by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm gonna pay a whole lot of attention to that, for sure.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
    1. Re:Wow, someone posted an opinion on their blog by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's also on Arstechnica - http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/06/op-ed-safari-is-the-new-internet-explorer/
      Same article, same author. Don't know why the TFS used the blog instead of a news source.

  11. Conflict of Interest by null+etc. · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's simple. As long as a significant portion of Apple's revenue comes from having a closed, "walled-garden" ecosystem, Apple will be disinclined to participate anything that might result in the demise of that ecosystem. After all, it's hard to be in the same boat as everyone else supporting WebAssembly etc., when that same technology will ultimately result in the death of on-platform app stores.

    1. Re:Conflict of Interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and it's not just about revenue. It's about continued dominance.

      Apple is in a position of being the richest company and they dominate pretty much everywhere they are. But the barbarians are at the gate. Google, Samsung, Microsoft, etc. Basically they are at war with the rest of the world. They also don't really have allies, just sycophants at best.

      So to continue to dominate, they need to create an ecosystem, mainly centered around iCloud, where customers enter for whatever reason, and cannot or do not want to leave. This is their strategy and it will remain probably always unless they fall big time.

      A lot of small annoyances on their part result from this strategy. For example, the forced automatic of the Apple watch app on the iPhone even if you'll never buy an Apple watch.

    2. Re:Conflict of Interest by Known+Nutter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's simple. As long as a significant portion of Apple's revenue comes from having a closed, "walled-garden" ecosystem, Apple will be disinclined to participate anything that might result in the demise of that ecosystem. After all, it's hard to be in the same boat as everyone else supporting WebAssembly etc., when that same technology will ultimately result in the death of on-platform app stores.

      Are we really ready to celebrate concepts like WebAssembly? I may be old (get off my lawn) but, to me, binaries injected into the browser from all corners of the internet does not a utopia make.

      --
      Beware of the Leopard.
    3. Re:Conflict of Interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I we have great apps using WebAssembly, and I am sure that will come, and the
      iPhone is the only smarphone to not support them, this will start to harm Apple.

    4. Re:Conflict of Interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      WebAssembly is (at least to start with) just a binary representation of asm.js... and asm.js is a subset of JavaScript. So essentially it's (at least to start with) just a better storage format for expressing asm.js which is just JavaScript. So it's not binary in the sense of ActiveX controls and arbitrary execution of binaries.

      And yes if the web doesn't compete with apps it will, sadly, lose.

    5. Re:Conflict of Interest by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      It's simple. As long as a significant portion of Apple's revenue comes from having a closed, "walled-garden" ecosystem, Apple will be disinclined to participate anything that might result in the demise of that ecosystem. After all, it's hard to be in the same boat as everyone else supporting WebAssembly etc., when that same technology will ultimately result in the death of on-platform app stores.

      Apple's walled garden and iTunes revenue pales in comparison to their iPod revenue, which has been declining for 10 years straight. (It's roughly on order of a billion dollars). Just to compare, Macs account for several tens of billions of dollars. And iPhones/iPads account for hundred billion.

      Apple's take from iTunes is small and not essential. Unlike Amazon whose business model IS to sell content, Apple's model is to provide content, to sell hardware.

      Oh yeah, iTunes content sales include music and movies as well. (Apple does not break it out any finer grained than that).

      Anything Apple does is to sell hardware - that's their main revenue generator. Everything else is just icing. Especially to encourage sales of new hardware.

      Safari upgrades don't sell hardware.

  12. Betteridge's law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The answer is no.

    What a bunch of pureed bovine excrements.

    Obvious mythical cave-dwelling ugly Scandinavian dwarf is obvious.

  13. Re:I never knew by baka_toroi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You are not aware iOS is a major OS?

  14. yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's at about where IE7 was in terms of rendering CSS3 correctly. It will get better as time rolls on, they all sucked when they were young it's a process of writing code finding success/failure and rewriting looking for success patterns.

  15. Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by jmnugent · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a 20yr IT guy,.. who started using Macs (in depth) about 5 to 7 years ago.. I pretty much use Safari for everything. Why?... It gives me the best Stability, Performance and Battery-life. Call it whatever names you want... but it works for me. (and I work in IT.. and push it pretty hard.. so No, I'm not "just surfing Facebook" with it).

    1. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey! You're not playing by the group think rules!!! Quick! Mod troll!!!

    2. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by ClaraBow · · Score: 2

      I agree, Safari is faster and more stable than any other browser on Mac OS X.

    3. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For Safari to be the new IE, Microsoft would have to stop shipping IE, and make it MUCH less vulnerable. OR Apple would have to make Safari a lot more vulnerable, and make it incompatible with most other browsers.

    4. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by breakspirit · · Score: 2

      He said he was a 20 year IT guy, not a 20 year old IT guy. There's a difference. He could be 60 years old for all you know.

    5. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by dazol · · Score: 4, Informative

      As a 42 year old system engineer (*nix) I can say your inexperience is showing. There hasn't been a company I've worked for who didn't have a plethora of Macs in the hands of the developers, SysAdmins *and* managers.

      Most of our linux admins? Macs.

      Half our Windows admins? Macs.

      1/4 of our developers? Macs.

      Went to a couple Puppet conferences. Most of the laptops? Macs.

      etc, etc, etc.

      The rest of your comment is pure applesauce.

    6. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      kids makes me lol... dumbass

      talk to me when you're breaking the OS when trying to program against a common API

    7. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, as long as you like ads, and don't care about your privacy, there is nothing wrong with Safari.

    8. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 0

      As a 42 year old system engineer (*nix) I can say your inexperience is showing. There hasn't been a company I've worked for who didn't have a plethora of Macs in the hands of the developers, SysAdmins *and* managers.

      So I guess you still live in your basement? There is a world out there. And Macs have very low adoption (single digit) within corporations.

    9. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by exomondo · · Score: 5, Funny

      So I guess you still live in your basement? There is a world out there. And Macs have very low adoption (single digit) within corporations.

      But he has anecdotal evidence!

    10. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      The question is not corporate adoption but developer adoption. Airplanes have a very low adoption percentage among all people who use automated transportation but a high adoption rate among pilots.

    11. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By default, Safari enables "Do not track me" and other privacy features. Apple does not try to shove ads in your face, unlike Google. Nice bullshit, though. Care to quote from anywhere or were you just spewing anti apple bile out your ass like everyone else on slashdot these days?

    12. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing that you got a score of five for simply typing out a series of arbitrary figures. This place is usually smarter than that.

    13. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      Web developer here. Safari really does lag behind the other major browsers in terms of what it can do. At my job we're essentially keeping it on semi-support (ie. we're treating even the most modern version of Safari like it's IE9) because it's not exactly uncommon that CSS that works unprefixed in every other browser still requires a prefix in Safari - and maybe an older version of the syntax. Or it isn't supported at all. JS-wise the same applies: Every once in a while we come across thigs that everyone but Safari can do these days and then we have to add polyfills that make the site heavier.

      Safari has a decent user interface (although its developer tools feel a bit clunky) and the integration with iOS Simulator is a godsend for mobile development. But that doesn't change the fact that Safari has fallen behind in terms of getting standards adopted. That's why I'm happy that Safari has only a minor market share - having first-class support for all the other major desktop browsers and half a dozen mobile ones is already enough work.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    14. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adoption rates vary widely by industry.

      Current company, is getting close to 50% outside of IT are on macs. Inside IT 0%.

      Previous 2 companies: maybe 1%; typical anal-retentive corporate.

    15. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How old were you when you signed up for /. with that UID? 8?

      I'm calling BS.

    16. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure Apple doesn't do the same bullshit on OS X as they do on iOS?
      Third-Party Browsers Are Crippled

    17. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yours and mjwx and jmnugent must all be from the US. Across the pond the distribution is quite different:

      CEO? Mac
      Sales / Accounting? Windows
      Representatives? Mac
      Linux admins? Linux
      Windows admins? Windows
      Developers? Linux

    18. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep working on those VMware certifications aka the ones worth mentioning.

    19. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Running bootcamp or a fusion VM?

    20. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have hated Apple/Macs before it was cool to hate them. Their cult goes everywhere, in every forum, posting how great their products are, even if the topic is nothing related to them.

      example:
      Forum Topic = How much math do you use in your daily job.
      Eventual post in the topic = I use my Mac Book Pro every day to run the calculator.

      What does the type of computed you are using matter to the topic? It is blatant fanboi advertising. Apple can't even follow standard keyboard conventions that work on Windows AND Linux. The answer from Apple about Safari will be along the lines of "you are webbing it wrong".

    21. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Still, developpers using Macs must not be greater than say, 10-20%.

    22. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by bursch-X · · Score: 1

      This just in: AdBlock, AdBlock Plus, Ghostery and other extensions are available on Safari! Gasp! Whoda thunk? (I'm still using Firefox, out of principle – support the open web)

      --
      There are two rules for success:
      1. Never tell everything you know.
    23. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by dazol · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about adoption rate as a whole. I was commenting on this specific statement "Looking around at a room of IT specialists, the only ones with a Mac are middle managers. This is why we dislike it, it's a product designed to keep the user occupied, not to enable the user to be productive."

      Please, do try to keep up.

    24. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by bursch-X · · Score: 1

      Did you know that 83% percent of percentages quoted in online discussion are pulled out of the quoters ass?

      --
      There are two rules for success:
      1. Never tell everything you know.
    25. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by dazol · · Score: 1

      My anecdotal evidence for his(her) anecdotal evidence. /shrugs.

    26. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by dazol · · Score: 1

      Good question, and honestly, I'm not sure. For mine, no. For some others, no. For all of them, no earthy clue. I wouldn't be surprised if at least some of them weren't, though.

    27. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, Safari is faster and more stable than any other browser on Mac OS X.

      The several dozen hipsters who use OS X are doubtless thrilled to hear this.

    28. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by dazol · · Score: 1

      You must be new to Slashdot, or an Anonymou....oh. Yeah.

    29. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      As a 20yr IT guy,.. who started using Macs (in depth) about 5 to 7 years ago.. I pretty much use Safari for everything. Why?... It gives me the best Stability, Performance and Battery-life. Call it whatever names you want... but it works for me. (and I work in IT.. and push it pretty hard.. so No, I'm not "just surfing Facebook" with it).

      Am I right in thinking you work in IT?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    30. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      How old were you when you signed up for /. with that UID? 8?

      I'm calling BS.

      Someone above has pointed out that by " As a 20yr IT guy" he probably meant "an IT guy with 20 years experience in the industry", which is a classic example of why writing standard English is a good idea if you want people to understand you properly.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    31. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      but are they available on the most popular Safari browser used, mobile Safari?

    32. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Imazalil · · Score: 1

      Yes, all this time desktop Firefox and Chrome on OS X have simply been Safari wrappers, and they didn't even know it!

      Surprise, OS X allows full apps/binaries to run from any corner of the internet. It always has, and there are no plans afoot to get rid of this. Despite all the 'OMG walled garden lulz' blog posts on the internet.

    33. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've used a mac before for development, but was using Windows for .Net development.

    34. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm confused what the "IT" guy credential does here. Ignoring the appeal to authority, you could work Help Desk requests and be an "IT guy."

    35. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      Though probably he's 90 and completely senile :D

    36. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by praxis · · Score: 1

      Are AdBlock Plus and Ghostery available for MobileIE?

    37. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      As a 20yr IT guy,.. who started using Macs (in depth) about 5 to 7 years ago.. I pretty much use Safari for everything. Why?... It gives me the best Stability, Performance and Battery-life. Call it whatever names you want... but it works for me. (and I work in IT.. and push it pretty hard.. so No, I'm not "just surfing Facebook" with it).

      That's a good post, I just want to note your efforts and provide some feedback if I may. I especially like how you capitalized stability, performance, and battery for no apparent reason. Also the claim of "it works for me", that's good stuff. That's a claim that sounds good but also that no one can disprove because it's simply your personal experience and nothing else of any substance. I like how you call yourself an "IT guy" too. It makes people think that you might know what you're talking about, but it's still vague enough to be completely useless to any other point you're trying to make. And the claim of "about 5 to 7 years ago", I like that one too. What was I doing in 2010? What was I doing in 2008? I have no idea! Also, how you "pretty much" use Safari for "everything". "Pretty much" for "everything"... I see what you're doing there.

      In general, I'm giving you a very good rating, although I need to dock a few points. The specific phrase is "it just works", you need the "just" in there. Otherwise it checks out, well done.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    38. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Probably not. Mobile IE is therefore too for those who likes ads.

    39. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by praxis · · Score: 1

      I don't like Ads. I use Mobile Safari. Those need not be mutually exclusive. I don't browse ad-supported websites very often.

    40. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny. I Find the opposite. Most companies I worked for Windows with a few Macs that only work with a few things. Just shy of 20 years in the IT world.

    41. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, like Slashdot. For some reasons that "disable advertisement" box always revert to uncheck after some time.

    42. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the laptop is a Mac, but which OS ?

      A very large percentage of all macbooks run Windows for a livin'
      The geeks might dualboot, but the drones have a pure Win7 image, not atrace of OSX left...

    43. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      but are they available on the most popular Safari browser used, mobile Safari?

      They are available on almost any other browser on iOS - which as somebody pointed out are basically Mobile Safari. Ohh, and with iOS 9 you'l get Content Blockers. You now have a couple of weeks to get used to losing that beloved piece of advocacy.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    44. Re:Why all the Safari/Apple hate ?... by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Good to know that iOS9 will finally enter the 3rd millenial.

  16. Re:I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He barely knows what a computer is let alone a smartphone.

  17. Conferences are one thing... by SuperKendall · · Score: 3

    Does it really matter that much they aren't at conferences? That shouldn't be where evolution of HTML and browsing happens anyway...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Conferences are one thing... by retchdog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's more or less what I was thinking as well. From a user perspective, Safari is pretty much like Chrome except more stable and much less resource-hungry.

      Maybe this relentless catering to every sloppy demand of every hack web programmer is what makes web browsers the bloated pieces of shit that they are nowadays.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    2. Re:Conferences are one thing... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Why not? Why wouldn't you want people to negotiate at conferences?

    3. Re:Conferences are one thing... by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When you can figure out the reason that no other technical standard is decided at paid conferences, you'll have your answer.

      Or you could have it way sooner, but then you didn't choose that option.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    4. Re:Conferences are one thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does it really matter that much they aren't at conferences?

      Maybe. They *are* behind in supporting new web application technologies. Perhaps not attending meetings with the rest of the industry contributes to that. Take EdgeConf for instance: it's hardly a profit machine conference it is £100 to pay for panelists and facilities (with overage donated).

      That shouldn't be where evolution of HTML and browsing happens anyway...

      That is not really relevant no matter how much you stamp your feet.

    5. Re:Conferences are one thing... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      So you don't have a good reason.

    6. Re:Conferences are one thing... by SuperKendall · · Score: 0

      I gave my reason originally; you just seemingly cannot comprehend it. That's on you.

      If you want words to read because you lack simple common sense , read this

      Since I am assured you'll learn nothing from that either, I leave the last response to you as it's not worth following up on helping you more than that.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    7. Re:Conferences are one thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's more or less what I was thinking as well. From a user perspective, Safari is pretty much like Chrome except more stable and much less resource-hungry.

      Maybe this relentless catering to every sloppy demand of every hack web programmer is what makes web browsers the bloated pieces of shit that they are nowadays.

      Isn't Chrome laden with malware that invades your privacy on behalf of Google?

  18. Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I've always thought of Safari as more of an "also ran" than anything resembling a leader in the browser market.

    1. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
      Someone posts an opinion in a blog, and it becomes a /. article.

      .
      I post an opinion here and it is mod'd as flamebait. Must be some Apple fanboys around..... :)

    2. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by Shados · · Score: 1

      It was pretty popular if your demographic was younger people, design people, or startups/small scale companies that aren't tied to Windows stuff (a lot of HR or sales software are).

      If you were in those demos, you could easily get a 20-30% market share.

      Had to be careful when taking the metrics though. Safari's splash page showing most popular sizes would render thumbnails by running all javascripts, with only an http header that can only be inspected server side to differentiate it (so pages on CDNs need not apply if using a hosted tracking suite like Omniture or Google Analytics). That would make Safari look like it had 50-60% market share on a bad day and confuse people like crazy.

      Still it has a decent share, enough that you need to support it.

    3. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't an also ran wrt performance. We have several internal sites that generate huge reports and very complicated SVG graphs, and Safari is by far the best performing browser. I develop on some of those sites, and I've seen no compatibility problems. It is so much faster than Chrome that we've started buying MacBooks for employees rather than making them suffer with Windows and Chrome.

    4. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Cyberdog was popular once, too. In that same 'demo' as you put it.

    5. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, muffin. The world is such an unfair place :'(.

    6. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone posts an opinion in a blog, and it becomes a /. article.

      .

      I post an opinion here and it is mod'd as flamebait. Must be some Apple fanboys around..... :)

      It's not that. You basically said the browser analog of "Was Windows ever a force in the OS market?" that would even make a Linux fanboy reach for the -1 Ignorant button.

    7. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The blog post verbatim is on Arstechnica.

    8. Re:Was Safari ever a force in the browser market? by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Well, it was the fastest browser at one point. Even on Windows. So I started using it for a while and really liked it. Then it stopped being the fastest and started taking forever to start instead. By then Chrome was much faster in both respects so I changed over. Never really liked firefox. I think it reminds me too much of Netscape.

  19. Why? Applications. by jbolden · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well I think the why is pretty clear with the feature set they have been releasing. On OSX Safari is a default choice whose major advantage is ties with iOS devices. They are fine with people using other browsers and might even welcome a more diverse OSX broswer ecosystem. On iOS they want to move away from the web and towards applications. They need the iOS Safari engine to be fast, but they don't need it to support the full range of web experiences since increasingly they want those experiences delivered via. applications.

    The analogy with I.E. is really quite on point. Apple is acting like Microsoft did in the late 1990s / 2000s for the same reason Microsoft was disinterested in I.E. They were focusing on platform specific advantages that come from client / server rather than purely web server design.

  20. Re:That's because... by Dynedain · · Score: 1

    LOL - you realize the the original iPhone allowed *only* HTML/JS apps? And there are a lot of limitations in the iOS APIs because they'd prefer you do certain things in browsers where it can follow standards instead of being some developer's hack-up of poor security or poor performance?

    --
    I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  21. Re:That's because... by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 0

    Well, in later time, Apple encouraged developers to develop iOS 'apps' that are just a bunch of HTML/JS all zipped up into an 'app' container.

    Technical detail: The .ipa files that are the apps in your iDevice can be renamed as .zip files and opened. I've done so with a few of the image-rich apps that I acquired back when I used an iOS device and pulled out nicely hierarchical directories full of the useful images and other content that were embedded into an 'app' in the .ipa file. (For instance, there are some nice collections of Kahn Academy videos you can get that way.) You can get the .ipa files out of whatever directory iTunes caches them into when you synch your device to your PC.

  22. Is Soccer worth watching? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It won't catch on. No time for commercial ads.

    1. Re:Is Soccer worth watching? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      It won't catch on. No time for commercial ads.

      Oh, I'm sure FIFA willl get round to fucking it up with breaks every quarter of an hour, time outs etc if it ever really takes off in the US.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  23. I think Apple's glory days are over by FudRucker · · Score: 0, Troll

    with Steve Jobs dead Apple is slowly sliding to the back of the technology race, a good android smartphone is just as good as an iphone for much less cost, and Linux on a PC is looking better everyday, i give Apple another 5 to 10 years and they will be a shadow of their former selves

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by jbolden · · Score: 1, Funny

      When Steve Jobs was alive high end Android phones were from a hardware perspective usually quite a bit more advanced than Apple / iOS. Today the opposite is true and high end Android are often quite a bit behind by most metrics. If anything Android has been falling further behind Apple phones since Steve Jobs died.

      On OSX Apple was mostly ahead than and is ahead now. How far is Microsoft towards retina only systems? While Apple has converted over most of their major lines and likely around 2017 is selling 0 or very few non retina machines. How far is Microsoft towards taking advantage of SSD and CPU freezing to increase battery life? Etc..

      Your estimate is silly.

    2. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Linux on PC looks just as shitty as it ever has. Perhaps they've made some progress, but the average user will never see it. It's still a rank puddle of piss that only the super technical use due to it's raw commandline power. Once you eliminate the initial cost to entry, there's zero reason for the average consumer to look at Linux for anything.

      Even if Apple is sliding, OS X and Windows are still light years ahead of the dead rotting corpse that is the Linux desktop.

    3. Re: I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shows how little you know. I use Windows for games, like an Xbox. That's all windows is to me, a game system.

    4. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is ahead of Android, "by most metrics?" What are you smoking?

    5. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      IMO when jobs came back, thats when i gave up on apple. I was a huge fan in the powerPC days, but since the ipod, it seems they have decided that user lockin is more important than anything else

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    6. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      Today the opposite is true and high end Android are often quite a bit behind by most metrics.

      Citations????

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    7. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Apple has reinvented themselves before and when whatever train they're currently on runs out of steam they'll likely do it again. Back at the introduction of the Macintosh they were about saving users from conformity. Eventually they ended up getting so far in the hole their saving grace came from Microsoft and now it's the complete opposite, conformity and lack of choice is their game.

      ...and before anybody flies off the handle thinking this means I'm bagging out Apple no, I have an iPhone and I like it and don't feel a need to express individualism or personality through my choice of smartphone.

    8. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Known+Nutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      , it seems they have decided that user lockin is more important than anything else

      This is getting tiring, and along with "walled garden", it is really stale and worn out as an argument. What company (that turns a profit) isn't interested in customer retention? What other products and services are portable in the manner you imply compared to Apple? Jesus, this has been going on for ages with tech. Did your Atari 2600 carts work in that fucking ColecoVision your weirdo friend had? No... they didn't. And that same song continues today.

      --
      Beware of the Leopard.
    9. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by jbolden · · Score: 1

      touch response, camera, display quality, battery life per mAh, 64 bit- CPU

    10. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by ganjadude · · Score: 0, Troll

      digital and carts are different. Does google make me use google play to load an MP3? no but apple makes you use itunes

      can i use chrome in IOS??? No!... (not really anyway)

      can I keep ticking off things I can do in other OS's that I cant do in osX or iOS?? yes

      get tired of hearing it all you want, it doesnt make it any less true

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    11. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Known+Nutter · · Score: 5, Informative

      digital and carts are different.

      When you're describing vendor lock-in, I fail to see how the comparison is not relevant.

      Does google make me use google play to load an MP3? no but apple makes you use iTunes

      They do? Are you high? I just took one of the tracks from that U2 album Apple pushed. Track 6, Volcano. I took that track, an m4a, copied over to a Windows box, and played it in VLC. VLC runs on OS X along with a host of other MP3/media players. So, wtf were you saying??

      can i use chrome in IOS??? No!... (not really anyway)

      So no...fine, user lock in without Chrome. Give me a break.

      can I keep ticking off things I can do in other OS's that I cant do in osX or iOS?? yes

      You better keep trying, because your first two sucked ass.

      --
      Beware of the Leopard.
    12. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do not forget Apple has copied each new feature added to Android while Android only copied the original iOS. Apple is not a shadow of Apple, rather a shadow of Google.

    13. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The difference between companies is not in their desire for customer retention but rather how they (try to) do it.

      Oddly enough people dislike lock-in and prefer inertial retention and quality services. Not that Apple doesn't do the later but they *do* significantly more of the former than some of the competition, certainly more successfully (people don't care as much about lock-in that doesn't affect a lot of folks).

    14. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not true that "apple makes you use itunes" to "load" (play) "an MP3" in Mac OS X. You can play a MP3 right from the Finder, and there is nothing stopping you from installing your own MP3 player application, if you want to do so. It's just that iTunes does the job well enough that most people don't want to do so.

      Even on iOS there are player applications other than iTunes, like the one that plays songs while showing a simulation of a cassette tape (!!) on the screen.

    15. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you still don't provide metrics, because then someone will post a cheaper Android phone with better metrics than the one you compared against.
      That will leave you with the subjective "touch response" and "but I think it feels snappier!"

    16. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      It's taken Google until their 13th major release to copy iOS's permissions model. Apple is not afraid of using good ideas, no matter where they originate. Obviously, Google is.

    17. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      This is getting tiring, and along with "walled garden", it is really stale and worn out as an argument.

      If you could install your own browser on iOS, then browsers wouldn't be a problem. Because of the walled garden, you can't.

      "Walled garden" isn't a tired argument against iOS, it is a very serious problem, but fanboys would rather ignore it or call it 'worn out.' In reality it sucks and there's no need for it, and plenty of reasons to not have it.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    18. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Dog-Cow · · Score: 2

      Please point out the "good" Android phones available in August 2007.

    19. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      That's OK. Apparently you've also given up on intelligence and knowledge.

      It was under Jobs that Apple moved to "the" standard PC platform -- Intel.
      The iPod always supported media from any source; iTunes (Store) was not even available at launch.
      OS X has always supported 3rd-party development, and Xcode has been freely-available for roughly forever. You've also never been tied to Xcode for development on that platform.

      The only way Apple locks you in is by not being Microsoft (Windows) or Google (Android). That means nothing to anyone that has a working mind.

    20. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Apple does not force you to use iTunes unless you have an iDevice, and increasingly, even that is not true. You can do almost everything from the device itself these days.

      You could use Chrome if you wanted to. I think you'll have to build it yourself, though.

      Please find something that you are not allowed to do on OS X that you are allowed on other OSes. Technical limitations are technical limitations, and do not count (e.g. no DirectX). Other Mobile OSes have limitations too, though Android seems to have very few.

      In short: you're still an ignorant moron who hates because Apple.

    21. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You are simply an ignorant fuck. Find one thing that only Apple does that both qualifies as vendor lock-in and that is not intended to improve quality for the user.

    22. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by moronoxyd · · Score: 1

      Apple does not force you to use iTunes unless you have an iDevice, and increasingly, even that is not true.

      Can I buy music from the iTunes store without installing the iTunes software?
      That's not a rhetorical question: I would like to buy something that is only available there, but there is no Linux version of iTunes.

    23. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What world are you posting this from?!

    24. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      What world are you posting this from?!

      OP appears to be proof of the "many worlds" interpretation of quantum physics, as it's hard to believe it originated from our universe.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    25. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine asshole. Example: My Macbook from 2009, has a 32bit efi and therefore cant be upgraded past OSX 10.7 (Lion). Used to run XCode just fine, but now it cant. IOS 7 and 8 now requires XCode 5 and 6 respectively, and can only be loaded on OSX 10.8+, which requires 64 bit efi. So 32bit efi == no OSX 10.8 == no XCode 6 == no IOS 8 development. In other words, the Macbook is useless and the only option now is to shell out even more $$$ just to compile a fucking IOS app. Makes the $100 I shelled out for a developer license I got to use for 2 months a real spit in the face.

      Other example: My HP laptop from 2007, "made for Vista", but now running linux. Runs Android Studio like a fucking champ. No hassles. Develop for linux. No hassles. Cross compile for windows. No hassles. Do I need a google machine to write for Android? No. Do I need a Toshiba machine to write programs for Toshiba laptops? No. But touch anything Apple and you need fucking Apple from start to finish.

      Apple == walled garden/vendor lock-in didn't become part of the geek consciousness because "haters gotta hate". It's because it's a real thing, and you have to have some kind of blindness to not see it.

    26. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      There are good reasons for the walled garden, although they don't tend to apply to the Slashdot crowd.

      The walled garden is a large whitelist of programs that have been checked for malware. It isn't perfect, but it keeps malware off iDevices pretty effectively. If there was some official way to sideload, people would do that, and wind up with malware on their iDevices. It also ensures that all apps on iDevices adhere to the UI guidelines, giving a fairly consistent experience. This means that the iDevice experience remains consistent and safe.

      Realistically, most people don't have much hope of staying malware-free if they can pick their own programs to run from the general jungle. Slashdotters tend to think they can, although some of that is likely overconfidence. Slashdotters also tend not to care about UI as much.

      So, what are the reasons against it? I understand the ideology here, and rather approve of it, but it isn't important outside geekdom, and most of Apple's customers aren't geeks. There are things I could do with sideloaded software on my iPhone, but nothing I really care about. If I want to do significant things, I use my laptop or desktop, because they're much better suited for serious work.

      An iDevice is a very powerful tool and toy. It isn't as powerful as it could be, but because of that it can make assurances that Android can't.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    27. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by sabbede · · Score: 1

      I thought they ended when Woz left.

    28. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Maybe now, but not always. Steve Wozniak was a groundbreaker, and put Apple ahead in substance. Jobs was too focused on style, which is pretty much the only thing Macs still have going for them.

    29. Re:I think Apple's glory days are over by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Those are lousy reasons to take away someone's freedom. The walled garden hasn't kept malware off devices, and Android has shown you can get all the benefits of the walled garden without giving up the freedom.

      There are always more people who will try to take control of your device if they can. We've seen this play out before with Microsoft Palladium....first being a way to ensure you had legal copies of windows, then expanding to mean you could only play media approved by the RIAA/MPAA etc. Fortunately it got dropped back then.

      Even in this story we have a story where Apple is censoring software (alternate browsers), making the lives of their users worse.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  24. So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It should be pretty common knowledge now. Buy crapple, get shit on by them. You're not a valued customer, you're a wallet with legs. It's always been that way, you're just starting to really see it now.

    1. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is about the effect on people who didn't even buy apple in the first place.

  25. Yes, people still use iOS by tepples · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just because you no longer use Apple's iOS doesn't mean millions of other people don't still use iOS. There are two kinds of browsers on iOS: browsers that run remotely and behave akin to Remote Desktop, such as Opera Mini, and browsers that wrap the system's UIWebView or WKWebView control, such as Safari. The App Store Review Guidelines forbid third-party web engines that run on an iOS device. This means the vast majority of browsers for iOS are essentially window dressing around Safari.

    1. Re:Yes, people still use iOS by TWX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I use Safari on an OSX box from time to time, when I need to deal with work e-mail and I don't want to log-out of personal e-mail on the main browser. Seems to work fine that way.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    2. Re:Yes, people still use iOS by jjbenz · · Score: 1

      I always thought that was ridiculous as well.

  26. Re:That's because... by exomondo · · Score: 1

    LOL - you realize the the original iPhone allowed *only* HTML/JS apps?

    you realize they they ditched that favor of the "app" model?

  27. Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by tepples · · Score: 1

    LOL - you realize the the original iPhone allowed *only* HTML/JS apps?

    True, Apple originally planned for the iPhone to use web applications. But it took a long time for Apple to follow through on this plan. For instance, please explain why it took until iOS 6 for HTML/JS apps to access the user's photo and video libraries through an <input type="file"> control and until iOS 8 for HTML/JS apps to put the most basic 3D view on screen (WebGL).

    1. Re:Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by Dynedain · · Score: 2

      For instance, please explain why it took until iOS 6 for HTML/JS apps to access the user's photo and video libraries through an controls

      Because exposing a user's files to any in-page behavior is a security risk and needs to be handled in clean managed ways with limited APIs? The hooks they established to do this went far beyond just browsers and also affect how content is provided to apps and 3rd party API calls.

      and until iOS 8 for HTML/JS apps to put the most basic 3D view on screen (WebGL).

      Because 3D in browser has gone through a lot of iterations over the years? Read up on VRML for example. WebGL is a relatively recent fad extended from OpenGL and so relies on device drivers for hardware acceleration. Rather than have pages that would perform poorly or be inconsistently incompatible, Apple didn't guarantee provide the feature until OS-supported devices could support it. It's bad enough to run into situations where "it works on latest release, but not previous ones". Imagine how bad it would be if "it works on the latest release, but only on these specific models". That's a non-starter when it comes to the world of HTML/JS/CSS development.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    2. Re:Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by tepples · · Score: 1

      For instance, please explain why it took until iOS 6 for HTML/JS apps to access the user's photo and video libraries through [HTML file upload]

      Because exposing a user's files to any in-page behavior is a security risk and needs to be handled in clean managed ways with limited APIs?

      If Apple were sincere about making the web its API in iOS 1, it would have put a "clean managed" media chooser in place since iOS 1.

      Imagine how bad it would be if "it works on the latest release, but only on these specific models".

      Firefox already does this with its WebGL driver blacklist. It does not support WebGL on pre-OpenGL 2.0 GPUs, such as the integrated GMA 3100 in the Atom N450 processor in my laptop.

    3. Re:Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      Firefox already does this with its WebGL driver blacklist. It does not support WebGL on pre-OpenGL 2.0 GPUs, such as the integrated GMA 3100 in the Atom N450 processor in my laptop.

      Only because Firefox cannot control the hardware and the software layers. What's the point in saying your software supports feature X if all the hardware it runs on can't support X? Apple controls both sides within their products so they can choose what "support" means. They chose to make iOS8 the point where hardware-accelerated 3D was supported inside the browser because that's the release where all their supported hardware could handle the feature and do so without performance degradation.

      Again, as a developer or product manager, "works in iOS8" is a lot easier to worry about than "works in iOS8, but only on iPhone 4s and later (not iPhone 4), iPad 3 and later (but not the first iPad mini) and only on the last version of the iPod Touch". Limits on hardware fragmentation is considered one of the benefits of iOS and OSX development.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    4. Re:Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by Dog-Cow · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your reasoning is way off. Apple does exactly what you claim they didn't want to do all the time. Siri is not supported on some models that run iOS 7. The new multi-tasking in iOS 9 (multiple on-screen apps) is only supported on newer iPads, and not the iPhone at all, not even the 6+. So basically, you're so completely wrong it's not even funny.

    5. Re:Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure Apple always planned on web apps exclusively. Without any particular evidence, I think they just didn't have the development environment ready for release when the iPhone came out, and pushed web apps because that's what they could support at the time. It's a typical Apple thing to do: release something when they're confident they've got it right, and talk up alternatives in the meantime.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    6. Re:Safari was late in implementing some web APIs by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      App API support is totally different than in-browser support.

      As a web developer, it's very difficult to determine which specific hardware my page is being rendered on. And the abstraction of the web implies that I *should not* be targeting specific hardware.

      Hence OS level. Of course I shouldn't be targeting specific OS either, but that's a different story.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  28. Re:That's because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And there are a lot of limitations in the iOS APIs because they'd prefer you do certain things in browsers where it can follow standards instead of being some developer's hack-up of poor security or poor performance?

    Is this a question or a statement?
    Absent the question mark it would appear a statement so what is there that you cant do in an iOS app that you can do in a browser? Surely their native APIs are not so limited that they make you embed a whole browser in your application just to be able to do something.

  29. Opera? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really?

  30. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by kuzb · · Score: 0

    Moron detected. Abort! Abort!

    --
    BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
  31. Enterprise by acoustix · · Score: 0

    This is why Apple is dead in the enterprise. They don't support standards. Their browser has always sucked. And they're very secretive about product roadmaps.

    But the consumers just love it...

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    1. Re:Enterprise by Dynedain · · Score: 1

      Standards - They've supported tons of standards, and all their enterprise/business support tool chains are built up from *NIX libraries. Yes, they layer their own customizations on top (just like everyone else) and yes, these often change between releases without warning (but that's the point about secretive roadmaps).

      It's pretty hard to claim that Safari always sucked. Webkit was a fork of KHTML and from day one it was better than any KHTML browser (Konquerer was horrendous!). By limiting the browser to just the standards they quickly got other browser makers to improve their standards support (hey, there's "standards" again!). The only "enterprise-friendly" browser has always been IE, and that's only if you define "enterprise" as "dependent on IE-specific behaviors".

      Of all of these, secretive product roadmaps is the only one really at fault for lack of enterprise adoption. Speaking of enterprise adoption, which enterprise companies don't support iOS devices in this day and age?

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  32. It's all relative.. but, yes, Apple is dominating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the landlord over the browser on a major segment of mobile devices. While rendering is mostly compatible, any off browser functions are diminished.

  33. Browser updates aren't sexy at Apple keynotes by Joshua+Fan · · Score: 2

    Apple is the new IBM, content only to perform preventive maintenance on their annual upgrade cash machine. Anything that isn't awe-inspiring or scandalous enough to make headlines isn't worth their effort. Fixes to Safari might only add a couple bullet points to their "over 300 improvements" to OS X next year, and that's if they delay all fixes until then just to make them noticeable. The cost-to-benefit ratio is too high for those penny pinchers, so they won't bother.

    1. Re:Browser updates aren't sexy at Apple keynotes by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      I see Safari updates in the App Store app on my Macbook all the time. Stop being ignorant.

    2. Re:Browser updates aren't sexy at Apple keynotes by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 1

      You do indeed see Safari updates, however it seems to me that the majority of those updates are security fixes.

      The issue here is that Safari is getting slow to adopt new web technologies, and slow at fixing problems with the technologies they have adopted.

      This has been a relatively recent change, mostly since the WebKit/Blink split. Before then Apple through WebKit (and thus Safari) often led the way with new web technologies, and they were active participants in broader discussions about web standards, and much more open. It's felt as if they've closed off, and become resistant to event attempting to keep up, much less participate.

      The WebKit Surfin' Safari blog shows this quite clearly. Long ago the blog used to be regularly updated. In the last year however there's been just three updates, two of those within the last three weeks.

    3. Re:Browser updates aren't sexy at Apple keynotes by bursch-X · · Score: 1

      How dare you crush his wonderful narrative with such mundane things as facts? You insensitive clod!

      --
      There are two rules for success:
      1. Never tell everything you know.
  34. Annually would be preferred in enterprise... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad Apple doesn't know squat about dealing with enterprise.

    Given the rapidity with which Google deprecates support on their platform for their browsers (12 weeks!) in an enterprise environment this "annually lagged" browser is barely adequate. Enterprises need a browser that doesn't change for, like, 2 years or more. I'm personally not buying the nonsense of all this "quick sprint" web update cycle where I need a new wholly new version of this and that every few weeks and security updates and performance/stability patches on a daily basis.

    1. Re:Annually would be preferred in enterprise... by Dog-Cow · · Score: 2

      Apple doesn't care. That's not the same as "not knowing". Get real. Apple is a huge company, both in financial terms and in number of employees. Do you really think they don't know what an "Enterprise" needs in terms of IT support?

  35. Safari, Web API's and iOS by MacTechnic · · Score: 1

    The Edge Conference, which one can attend by invitation only, includes "delegates" from Google, Mozilla, Facebook, but not from Apple. Many of the web API's unsupported on Safari include functions provided by API's in iOS, or even Android. Some people want to create Web Apps, that create experiences very similar to iOS, but run on a mobile or desktop web browser. Apple would prefer you develop such Apps using iOS using Swift or Objective-C API's, which run natively with better performance in security. Why should Apple support API's on Safari, that allow Web apps to recreate the iOS experience on non-Apple devices? Why do you think Steve Jobs banned JAVA and Adobe Flash from iPhones?

    BTW, you can see which web API's are supported on a given web browser by going to http://caniuse.com/

    1. Re:Safari, Web API's and iOS by guruevi · · Score: 1

      My experience is these newfangled API's perform poorly across the board.

      For example, LocalStorage was great, it's fast, it's easy but is hamstrung by it's limits. IndexedDB is another beast entirely with severe performance and implementation issues and total non-resemblance of what an actual database interface should be.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  36. iOS users feel it by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I currently have a web radio transceiver front panel application that works on Linux, Windows, MacOS, Android, Amazon Kindle Fire, under Chrome, Firefox, or Opera. No porting, no software installation. See blog.algoram.com for details of what I'm writing.

    The one unsupported popular platform? iOS, because Safari doesn't have the function used to acquire the microphone in the web audio API (and perhaps doesn't have other parts of that API), and Apple insists on handicapping other browsers by forcing them to use Apple's rendering engine.

    I don't have any answer other than "don't buy iOS until they fix it".

    1. Re:iOS users feel it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I currently have a web radio transceiver front panel application that works on Linux, Windows, MacOS, Android, Amazon Kindle Fire, under Chrome, Firefox, or Opera. No porting, no software installation. See blog.algoram.com for details of what I'm writing.

      The one unsupported popular platform? iOS, because Safari doesn't have the function used to acquire the microphone in the web audio API (and perhaps doesn't have other parts of that API), and Apple insists on handicapping other browsers by forcing them to use Apple's rendering engine.

      I don't have any answer other than "don't buy iOS until they fix it".

      Response is "pay $1.99 to anyone who'll copy his idea and put it on the app store."

    2. Re:iOS users feel it by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

      Well, you could build an app with the same interface, features, etc. Sure it's more work, but that's where the money is. At some point presumably you have to put food on your table and a roof over your head, and ideology doesn't pay the bills. I don't like the idea of selling out any more than you probably do as a matter of principle, but my wife and kids need feeding and clothing.

    3. Re:iOS users feel it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but my wife and kids need feeding and clothing.

      That's your problem right there. At least you own it. Way to go.

  37. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well actually it seems to me Chrome itself is the new IE, in that I see more and more websites working on Chrome and maybe IE, but with compatibility issues in Firefox, like menus not working properly. Old IE was too far behind and deviated willfully in non-standard ways. Chrome is so bleeding edge, and web devs are lacking more and more insight into the issue of browser compatibility, that it seems to me we are heading into a whole new era of compatibility hell...

  38. Re:I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    I guess it would be much easier for someone like you. Not much pretending needed at all.

  39. Because it's Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, you expect Apple, those high and mighty snobs, to mingle with the rabble?

  40. Re:People still use Safari? by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    change your slider to view from -1

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  41. Re:That's because... by Dynedain · · Score: 1

    With the question mark it is an implied continuation of the previous question.

    "You realize ... there are a lot of limitations in the iOS APIs because they'd prefer you do certain things in browsers where it can follow standards instead of being some developer's hack-up of poor security or poor performance?"

    Speaking of which, Mr. Grammar Nazi, you forgot your own question mark:

    Surely their native APIs are not so limited that they make you embed a whole browser in your application just to be able to do something.

    For an example, try loading a publicly hosted URL directly in an HTML view with an app. Oh right, it used to be blocked because its a huge security risk on the level of stupidity that PDF is known for, and it directly duplicates what the browser should be doing. Instead you can use platform APIs to request content for your your view, or use the platform-provided wrapper to display remote content safely - which by necessity require you to build in a more responsible and secure way.

    --
    I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  42. Seriously? by B33rNinj4 · · Score: 1

    It always has been a twin to IE. It's a pain in the ass in all ways...and not the good kind.

  43. Story is a bit late by technosaurus · · Score: 1
  44. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by ArcadeMan · · Score: 2

    The "Android browser" browser is not Chrome.

  45. Re:That's because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speaking of which, Mr. Grammar Nazi, you forgot your own question mark

    It wasn't a question hence the lack of a question mark. The question was:
    What is there that you cant do in an iOS app that you can do in a browser?

    The API does provide a web view and I don't think there is really anything you can do in web app that you can't do in a native app. In fact for a long time it was the other way around, WebGL 3D graphics have only recently become available in Safari.

  46. Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chrome itself stays up, but too many of the websites I use end up in a state where there is a frequent "reload page" dialog that makes using it too painful.

    Firefox is great until it decides to consume all of the RAM. Bouncing a browser once a day for hygiene annoys me.

    And the super-frequent updates that break the plugins annoy me. Without the plugins, firefox isn't all that useful. (I might as well use NetSurf.)

    Microsoft's claims of repentance ring hollow; when they fall on their sword and depart the market entirely, I will consider that perhaps they might have changed.

    Safari takes about a month of constant use to go bananas and require a restart.

    All browsers suck. Safari sucks marginally less.
    That they won't join the cabal is something in their favor.

  47. Well by koan · · Score: 1

    I have several Apple devices and I NEVER use Safari.
    It's really a terrible browser.
    What I wonder is why Opera didn't take over by filling the very thing everyone wants, a privacy oriented browser with good features.
    It used to be pretty good and I had high hopes.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    1. Re:Well by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      A privacy-oriented browser doesn't make the developer of said browser any money.

    2. Re:Well by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Because approximately nobody wants a privacy oriented browser. Sorry, but there's endless demonstrations that most people simply don't value privacy.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    3. Re:Well by koan · · Score: 1

      most people simply don't value privacy.

      I disagree, most people do not know to what level they are being violated, and most have learned helplessness issues.

      A simple thought experiment shows this, "Do you prefer a door on the stall of the public restroom, or one without a door".

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    4. Re:Well by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      However, apps in general do not show your genitalia to anybody walking past. People will do something concrete to defend from a specific threat, like close the stall door in case somebody else is coming by. Private electronic data is a lot more abstract, and we weren't raised to not show it in public.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  48. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by Dashiva+Dan · · Score: 0

    Yeah except chrome follows (and yeah, sets, but not on it's own) web standards, whereas the problem with (legacy) ie is all it's proprietary functionality, that microsoft wedged in to give web app developers more power, but never was or became a browser standard. Chrome has avoided even the possibility of this occurring from the get-go. FOSS for a reason.

    --
    "lt;dr" is the correct response to most of my posts.
  49. But... but... HTML5!!! by msobkow · · Score: 1

    HTML5 was supposed to be the be-all and end-all compatability standard that would render all browser differences irrelevant.

    Then reality kicked in...

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  50. Re: I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just don't tell him about the Mensaphone, that might melt his brain into hamburger goo.

  51. It's their business model. by sbaker · · Score: 3, Informative

    When you expect to get most of your revenue from selling apps in the iStore - it's essential that people are unable to get apps for free via fancy web pages.

    Hence, iPhone doesn't support WebGL for doing fancy 3D graphics on a web page - if it did, people would write cool games in HTML/JavaScript/WebGL and monetize them directly without having Apple take 30% of the revenue and "approve" their product.

    Is this because Apple can't support WebGL? Hell no! The browser actually DOES contain code for WebGL, but it's disabled...UNLESS your web site signs up to display Apple-provided advertising banners...in which case, WebGL works great!

    Safari uses the exact same core rending software ("WebKit") as Chrome - so it can trivially support everything that Chrome supports - it's really just a matter of Apple deciding to deliberately cripple the browser to prevent people from providing apps for free.

    --
    www.sjbaker.org
    1. Re:It's their business model. by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      it's really just a matter of Apple deciding to deliberately cripple the browser to prevent people from providing apps for free.

      And other browsers as well... Safari is an Apple app, installed and updated from the iOS installations and as such has an unfair advantage in terms of OS resources. Just use and compare Safari and Chrome on the iPhone...

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    2. Re:It's their business model. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > UNLESS your web site signs up to display Apple-provided advertising banners.

      Uh, where did you get that misinformation from?

    3. Re:It's their business model. by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      Chrome uses a fork of WebKit. Sure, Apple could back port the changes, but that's not much difference than saying they could use Gecko.

    4. Re:It's their business model. by Anubis+IV · · Score: 5, Informative

      How does a post that gets almost all of its facts wrong get modded up as Insightful? You started on a provably faulty premise, backed it up with inaccurate statements regarding WebGL, and then closed it out by saying something that I'd have hoped most of us here would trivially recognize as incorrect.

      When you expect to get most of your revenue from selling apps in the iStore

      Apple announced at the start of the year that they've paid out $25B to developers over the life of the App Store. Do some quick math, and that means that Apple is averaging $0.45B in revenue each quarter from the App Store, which would put it at <1% of their quarterly revenue (e.g. Apple posted $60B in revenue in their latest, post-Christmas quarter).

      Which is to say, your basic premise here is that Apple is intentionally crippling the product that makes up 60% of their revenue (iOS hardware) in order to bolster the revenue in a segment that accounts for less than 1% of their revenue (App Store downloads). Seriously? Apple's main business isn't selling apps; it's selling selling devices that run apps, and you may even recall that back when the iPhone launched in 2007, the "apps" it supported were web apps, not native apps.

      iPhone doesn't support WebGL for doing fancy 3D graphics on a web page

      Could've fooled me. iOS 8 has been out for nearly a year at this point, and has had WebGL support from the beginning without any of the weird requirements you're talking about.

      The browser actually DOES contain code for WebGL, but it's disabled...UNLESS your web site signs up to display Apple-provided advertising banners

      A) You're confused. You're talking about iAds (and I'll discuss why I know you are in a sec), but the iAd advertising network only operates in iOS apps, not on websites. Sites can't sign up to it.

      B) It's not disabled. See above. WebGL support was available as an experimental feature in iOS 7, and as a standard feature in iOS8. No ads or other funny business required.

      The reason you're confused is because, technically speaking, iOS did have support for WebGL as far back as iOS 4.2, but it was only available to iAd developers. By that, I don't mean people who agreed to put iAds in their app. I mean people who were actually making the iAds themselves, since iAds are basically just mini webpages that display an ad.

      If that seems a bit weird at first glance, recall that WebGL was a resource-intensive feature on the devices of that day, and Apple has a history of restricting the scope or operation of resource-intensive features until the implementations or device capabilities improve (see: background processing, native apps on Apple Watch, etc.), so it made sense at the time why WebGL was restricted to iAds, since they were designed to only be on the screen for short periods of time yet could stand to gain the most from such a feature.

      The only sense in which what you said is correct is that for a few years the only people who were able to make use of WebGL on iOS were the ones making the ads, but it was never a feature that web developers had to make a Faustian pact with Apple to use. It simply wasn't available to them.

      Safari uses the exact same core rending software ("WebKit") as Chrome - so it can trivially support everything that Chrome supports

      They haven't both used "WebKit" since Google forked WebKit to create Blink over two years ago, but even before that, they weren't even running "the exact same core rendering software" for the last several years back when they were both running "WebKit".

      Google and Apple have had divergent multi-process architectures for quite some time. Google built

    5. Re:It's their business model. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Is this because Apple can't support WebGL? Hell no! The browser actually DOES contain code for WebGL, but it's disabled...UNLESS your web site signs up to display Apple-provided advertising banners...in which case, WebGL works great!

      Have you got sources on that? Googling couldn't get me any confirmation. And I'm pretty sure people or FTC (?) would sue the shit out of them.

    6. Re:It's their business model. by DanJ_UK · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points I'd mod this up.

      --
      - Dan
    7. Re:It's their business model. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chrome and Safari did share a codebase, until everyone got fed up with how useless apple are.
      Now google and everyone else have packed up and gone to the blink fork, leaving apple to play with themselves.

    8. Re:It's their business model. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you expect to get most of your revenue from selling apps in the iStore

      Apple gets most of its revenue from selling phones.

    9. Re:It's their business model. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      In addition to all the misstatements in your post, you don't seem to realize that people do get apps for free via the App Store. There's plenty of free apps there. Most of the apps on my iPhone were not in fact paid for, and I'm not allergic to paying for apps I like. If people can get plenty of high-quality free apps in the App Store, why would Apple try blocking them from free web apps?

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    10. Re:It's their business model. by sabbede · · Score: 1
      Oh yeah? Well then why didn't they completely block Flash, Mr. Smartypants?

      Oh... wait... Nevermind.

  52. Re:That's because... by Dynedain · · Score: 1

    Surely their native APIs are not so limited that they make you embed a whole browser in your application just to be able to do something.

    Starting a sentence with "surely" to indicate disbelief is asking for confirmation of the statement contained therein.

    http://www.englishpractice.com...

    But I wasn't the one playing grammar nazi with where question marks were being placed.

    The API does provide a web view and I don't think there is really anything you can do in web app that you can't do in a native app. In fact for a long time it was the other way around, WebGL 3D graphics have only recently become available in Safari.

    The HTML view originally did not allow any remote content loading. This is one of the limitations PhoneGap was originally created for. The "UIWebView" added later essentially embeds a Safari page in your app and prevents a very tidy container to limit how the contents can affect the container app.

    --
    I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  53. Follow the Money by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Didn't stamp my feet. Pointed out they seemed to be, unreasonably. You just reenforce the point I made.

    Which "new technologies" are they behind on exactly again?

    Oh I forgot, they are so backwards in officially supporting ad-blockers going forward... hmm all of the sudden the whining about Safari makes so much more $ense now.

    You web developers really don't understand where the market is going, do you?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Follow the Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which "new technologies" are they behind on exactly again?

      Ah so you didn't read the article. This is the problem with Apple fanboys, you jump to the defense of Apple because they are Apple rather than understanding the situation and making up your own mind.

      You web developers really don't understand where the market is going, do you?

      Sorry, not a web developer. You lose there too.

  54. Apple doesn't make hardly any money from apps. by Brannon · · Score: 1

    They make hundreds of billions of dollars by selling physical devices to willing customers--it's always been this way.

  55. i switched back from chrome to safari by goombah99 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For a while chrome was better than safari but not any more. Safari consumes much less resources than chrome and it handles multiple tab loads much better on my boxen. The final straw was when chrome deleted every single bookmark during a synch. Lost everything and no way to recover it. I tried restoring a backup but chrome just resynched and erased it again . With safari time machine works beautifully.

    My faborite browser is Firefox but that's only because it has the zotero plug in.

    This article is total rubbish

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:i switched back from chrome to safari by mpol · · Score: 1

      > I tried restoring a backup but chrome just resynched and erased it again.

      What about unplugging the network cable, restoring your backup, and not having it resync.

      --

      Well, don't worry about that. We can get you back before you leave. (Dr. Who)
    2. Re: i switched back from chrome to safari by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's an Apple fan. They don't do sensible.

    3. Re:i switched back from chrome to safari by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I also use Safari, though I'm still pissed off with them for combining the URL bar and search box (which means that I keep typing one-word search terms and having it try to resolve them as domains, which then go in my history and so become the subject of autocomplete. The only way to avoid it is to get into the habit of hitting space at the end of a search, which is no saving on hitting tab at the start to jump to the search box). Chrome doesn't properly integrate with the keychain. I use Firefox on Android (self destructing cookies makes it the first browser I've used with a sane cookie management policy), but overall the UI for Safari does exactly what I want from a browser: stay out of the way.

      TFS is nonsense though. Developers don't know what's going to be in the next version of Safari? Why don't they download the nightly build and see?

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re: i switched back from chrome to safari by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That kind of defeats the purpose of running a browser, doesn't it?

    5. Re: i switched back from chrome to safari by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WebKit != Safari, otherwise you could say that Chrome, Opera, and Safari all have the same features and implementation.

      WebKit is basically just the renderer. Everything else is separate, including the js engine, all of the chrome, and other added features like plug-ins, bookmarks, tab support and all that stuff.

    6. Re:i switched back from chrome to safari by retchdog · · Score: 2

      Well, presumably it would just resync the next time you used chrome, unless you fuck around in Chrome and/or your Google account until you find the setting which changes the priority of local vs. remote storage.

      This seems to be a problem with most platforms. It can be partly (and condescendingly) dismissed as user error, but Google does seem to make things more confusing than necessary. We use google drive at work, and the unclear referents in its dialog boxes made me lose a directory before i realized it was "syncing" my work directory to an empty google drive. I know how it works now, but it was literally impossible to know exactly what it was doing in advance from the dialogs, and the documentation was so poor that I had given up trying to learn anything from it.

      Maybe the community should just write man pages for web services.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    7. Re: i switched back from chrome to safari by tepples · · Score: 1

      WebKit != Safari, otherwise you could say that Chrome, Opera, and Safari all have the same features and implementation.

      True on OS X, but Chrome for iOS uses UIWebView, which means WebKit renderer and WebKit JavaScript.

    8. Re: i switched back from chrome to safari by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      WebKit != Safari

      This is true, but it's also completely irrelevant. Safari uses WebKit, including WebCore and JavaScriptCore. All of the Safari features that are not part of WebCore and JavaScriptCore are entirely user-facing and irrelevant to web developers. If you look at what's actually included in the WebKit nightly builds, you'll see that it's a build of Safari.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  56. Safari Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bigger question is does anyone care?

  57. How does Safari have anything to do with lockin? by Brannon · · Score: 1

    Safari has always been an extremely standards compliant web browser. And Apple is a huge supporter of Webkit which the underlying rendering engine in several other browsers.

    You're completely full of shit. You don't like Apple because you don't like Apple customers.

  58. question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is Safari the New Internet Explorer?
    please visit my site in http://bit.ly/1LvJNvJ, click in here

  59. Re:Why? Applications. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, considering that originally the iPhone was all about web apps. I guess native apps in a language hardly anyone else uses using toolkits no one else uses are preferable to web apps when you are trying to keep the gates shut.

  60. Re:That's because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But I wasn't the one playing grammar nazi with where question marks were being placed.

    Nobody is playing "grammar nazi", I don't give a shit about that. You put a question mark at the end of a sentence that could be interpreted as a question or a statement so I asked but also took a guess and yet you're still all uppity me asking. Loosen up, gees sorry I asked whether or not it was a question.

    The HTML view originally did not allow any remote content loading. This is one of the limitations PhoneGap was originally created for. The "UIWebView" added later essentially embeds a Safari page in your app and prevents a very tidy container to limit how the contents can affect the container app.

    Ok so it turns out the answer to the question of "What is there that you cant do in an iOS app that you can do in a browser?" is "Nothing" and your statement that "there are a lot of limitations in the iOS APIs because they'd prefer you do certain things in browsers where it can follow standards instead of being some developer's hack-up of poor security or poor performance" is purely historical and no longer relevant.

  61. Smells like clickbait by fredness · · Score: 1

    Last I checked Safari has incredible market share on at least one major mobile platform.

  62. sneaky... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I get the feeling that Apple will have someone there at the conference recording all of the important talk, ready to bring it back home and see what they can steal from it all before trying to re-create a feature and make it look like their own itea...

  63. Re:I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are markets in which iOS is almost non-existent. But on others it's around half.

  64. Re:That's because... by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

    You are obviously a complete and total idiot. Please stop commenting. Ever.

    You have been able to load publicly-hosted web-content within an app's UIWebView from the very first day that such views were available in the SDK. That would be iPhoneOS 2.0, for those not familiar with the SDK evolution.

  65. Re:Why? Applications. by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

    Right. Because Android's toolkits are used on every other platform under the sun.

    Windows Phone is probably in a better position in terms of code portability than either iOS or Android, but really UI is so different that having the same toolkit only gets you so far, no matter which platform you're starting from.

  66. Safari is basically just a front end to WebKit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does it matter if Apple is attending to conference anyways?
    Who care's where Safari's going? Safari is just an application that makes use of the WebKit framework. It's certainly more important to discuss where WebKit is going, and since WebKit is OSS, isn't that quite obvious and fairly public information?

  67. Re:I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You seem really angry.

  68. Firefox is also the new IE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because if the trend of shoving "interface refinements" down the throats of every user which each new version continues. Or baking in addons. Or failing to find the locking problems that freeze Firefox every so often.

  69. There's nothing to discuss or talk about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just switch to Firefox. It's a bit like growing up and stopping worrying so much about what clothes you and other people wear.

  70. Re: I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    iOS runs MobileSafari, not Safari.

  71. Nolan, Nolan who the f... is Nolan! :) by seoras · · Score: 0

    Step aside Alice, tonight it's Nolan.
    Nolan Lawson sounds like a Fandroid with an axe to grind and some fruit to chop.

    I'm sure Google's fans still love to believe in the "don't be evil" slogan that Google once claimed to be their mantra.
    The evil being Microsoft and everything they did to get rich.
    Yes, they were evil, they didn't play ball in any industry attempt at standardisation.
    They made sure that only Microsoft worked with Microsoft to close off all competition.
    I ran up against them trying to get Cisco's PPP stack working with theirs when I worked on IOS (not iOS) back in the 90's.

    This blog article is an utterly pathetic attempt to try and make Apple out to be the new Microsoft of the 21st century.
    Not a chance. Not ever.
    Why today? A lot happening with Apple's Music & iOS today. Someone upset by the attention they are getting once again?
    So out roll the Apple bashing articles.

    Evil is pretending to be your friend by giving you "free stuff" and then quietly selling off your private data to the highest bidder.
    I prefer being a customer to being the product.
    So if you want to drawn parallels then I'd say that Google has replaced the monster it set out to slay.

    "He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into thee."
    - Nietzsche

    I use 2 browsers on a daily basis.
    1. Firefox for development work (because firebug is the best IMHO)
    2. Safari because I like to keep work & play separate. My bookmarks in sync across my devices and I do like/use Apple's "handoff".
    Having both browsers also means that on the rare occasion I find a website with a compatibility problem I just switch to the other one.

  72. Crab Apple by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    A better question is is Apple the new Microsoft? Or the old Apple, for that matter. Of course Microsoft is still the old Microsoft.

    Now that The Man is gone, and forever this time, upper management will move back to the non-innovating, don't shake the tree types waiting for their stock options or golden parachutes to kick in. A Confederacy of Do-Nothings.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    1. Re:Crab Apple by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      A better question is is Apple the new Microsoft?

      Nope.

      The thing about Microsoft was there was only one Microsoft. Now we have Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon... and Microsoft was still there, last time I looked. Consumers are now free to choose which of half-a-dozen evil empires to sell their soul to. Hurrah for consumer choice!

      ...but at least Macs now run Unix.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  73. the difference being that IE was pretty shitty to by unami · · Score: 1

    while safari still works fine as a browser. it might be behind in standards, etc. but that's not something the end user sees, as long as it works as intended - as it does. it's still a far cry from the days of ie4-6 which was a nightmare to use, horrible slow, lacked a lot of the useful features the competition had (tabs!) and was prone to collect malware.

  74. Re:I never knew by nospam007 · · Score: 0

    "You are not aware iOS is a major OS?"

    That may be, but just as myself on my 5 family iOS gadgets, everybody I know uses Chrome, most of them with Google Encrypted (Verbatim) as search engine, the only way to get non-trivial results.

    OTOH 20 million 12 year old girls might very well use Safari, but they also actually _pay_ for Taylor Swift songs, so their opinion doesn't really count.

  75. Pot meet kettle by sjbe · · Score: 1

    As opposed to you posting an opinion on someone else's blog.

    Cool story 'bro...

    1. Re:Pot meet kettle by tomhath · · Score: 2

      As opposed to posting an opinion on /.

  76. Why safari doesn't work for me by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I agree, Safari is faster and more stable than any other browser on Mac OS X.

    And yet I own a couple of macs but use Firefox instead. Why? Safari breaks oddly on certain websites I frequent, it lacks privacy add-ons I consider essential, it simply isn't available on linux and the Windows version is flaky in my experience. Plus (totally personal preference) I don't especially care for some of the interface choices. I use it some but primarily I don't bother unless I'm using an iPhone or iPad where there are no other practical options. Apple's applications in my experience rarely push the envelope and Safari seems to be no exception. It's a pretty basic webkit based browser with nothing to particularly recommend it over the alternatives. Works ok but not great and has no special features I care about.

    Chrome I find to be like constantly beta testing a product. Google is constantly changing and often breaking things which I find VERY annoying. IE has made great strides but it's still IE and not available on a Mac or Linux so I really don't bother with it unless I'm dealing with a website that can't handle one of the other browsers for some reason. (which shockingly still happens now and then)

    As for speed and stability I haven't found it to be any better or worse than the others. I use all the major browsers at least some of the time and all are generally stable and I cannot objectively see a speed difference between them during normal use. If there is a difference it is so small as to be inconsequential.

    1. Re:Why safari doesn't work for me by praxis · · Score: 1

      the Windows version [of Safari] is flaky in my experience.

      (Emphasis mine).

      Do you mean the three-year-old, discontinued, non-supported, version 5.1.7 of Safari for Windows? By citing such dated information, you make me wonder on what basis you've formed the rest of the opinions expressed in your post.

    2. Re:Why safari doesn't work for me by guruevi · · Score: 1

      I find Firefox to be slow and bloated. Using 500MB of RAM for 2-3 tabs is ridiculous. Perhaps the plugins are the reason but Safari + AdBlock + Click2Plugin is very, very responsive.

      Sites breaking is that site's issue, not a Safari issue and avoiding the site or fixing the site is usually the correct response. You can probably replicate the same issue on Chrome and other WebKit browsers.

      I like Safari's developer functions, Mozilla even copied them (poorly). For instance Safari allows you to see what actually happens on any site you just visited. Mozilla changes the way 304's and similar caches work in dev mode causing issues to disappear in dev mode.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    3. Re:Why safari doesn't work for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the browser that Apple quietly dropped support for, without any kind of announcement, leaving their Windows users hanging with an old, discontinued, non-supported browser until they finally noticed that they weren't being updated?

      I guess the only saving grace is that Safari, especially the Windows version, is such a pile of shit no one I know uses it except on iOS where Apple doesn't give them a choice about it.

  77. Why Apple has no interest in enterprise by sjbe · · Score: 1

    This is why Apple is dead in the enterprise.

    You say that as if Apple cares. Apple has pretty much never really cared about enterprise customers. They are high volume, low margin customers who don't give a shit about the things that actually make Apple's products different (software mostly) and certainly won't pay for them. Apple really has little to gain from getting into the enterprise business in a big way. If you want to see what would happen to Apple if they got into enterprise products look at the profit margins for HP (around 5%) versus Apple (around 25%). Anyone who thinks Apple should get into enterprise needs to first explain how Apple would do that without crushing their profit margins.

    1. Re:Why Apple has no interest in enterprise by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Well, enterprises don't want to pay 50% or more for comparable hardware on the basis of aesthetics. So even though Apple does make servers, nobody wants them. I have seen them though. Only the once, but it happened.

  78. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by arth1 · · Score: 2

    He didn't say the Android Browser, he said the default Android browser.
    In newer versions of Android, you don't get the old Android stock browser. It was the default in the past, but hasn't been so for a long time now, and isn't even available unless you run hacks to install it and its dependencies.

  79. Not looking? by sjbe · · Score: 1

    That may be, but just as myself on my 5 family iOS gadgets, everybody I know uses Chrome

    You must not know many people since Apple sold 74 million iPhones and 21 million iPads in the first quarter of 2015 alone. I see plenty of Android out there but the only way you won't see iOS devices is if you have your head in the sand.

    1. Re: Not looking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you actually read those? Even from the URL you can tell it's not from Q1 2015. 74M units in Q1? You're out of your mind.

    2. Re: Not looking? by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

      Actually yes, if you click on the link (not just look at the url) you see that they sold 74m iPhones in Q1 alone.

  80. Remember Safari for Windows? by Daniel+Hoffmann · · Score: 1

    I still have a copy of the installation file, its version is 5.1. I still use that version to test my stuff because I can not afford a Mac (it helps that I also need to support IE9 so I can't use the newer stuff anyway).Apple discontinued Safari for windows years ago, honestly I don't know if they simply don't care about the web or if they are trying to actually undermine it to promote native apps.

  81. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  82. Re:I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But surely iOS users don't all stick to Safari. Safari came with my work Mac, but nevertheless, I use Chrome. Why wouldn't other people do that? Just because someone blunders into the Apple Trap doesn't mean they all have to drink all the Apple koolaide, does it?

  83. Re:I never knew by Maritz · · Score: 1

    Kill yourself, you worthless piece of shit.

    Caring this much isn't cool. At all. ;)

    --
    I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  84. "too slow for 2015" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has it occurred to you that maybe different people have different expectations? You go to the island and are shocked that these people don't have cars and TVs and modern medicine, but to the natives, everything is perfectly normal.

    You say it's too slow for 2015 but is it too slow for 1990? We're talking about an insular community here, with a totally different culture. Imagine: it's a quarter century ago and you're playing video games on your NES. Someone from the 21st century walks up and says, "switch from that game to your web browser, I wanna show you a certain website." The next few minutes would be absolutely hilarious disconnect and failure to communicate. Eventually you and the 21st century stranger would get into a weird conversation about how they get software. "Holy crap, Nintendo has to approve everything?" You would be astonished, but my point is: so would they. To the Nintendo user, not having a modern software market is perfectly normal. Telling them "that's not how we do things in the 2000s" is irrelevant to them, because it's 1990.

    That's how you sound when you project post-1990 values on Apple users. They aren't the anachronism; you are.

    Or to put it another way: "too ___ for 2015" doesn't make sense because everyone's 2015 is a different tech level. We're not just one big happy world with all the same culture and values and technological and economic capabilities. You can't put yourself into an iOS user's shoes any more than you can tell a good buggy whip apart from a bad buggy whip. You simply have no idea.

  85. Re:I never knew by retchdog · · Score: 1

    myself on my 5 family iOS gadgets, everybody I know uses Chrome

    holy shit, we got a bad ass here!

    --
    "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
  86. Re:I never knew by retchdog · · Score: 2

    hint: Chrome (or any browser* on iOS) is little more than a skin over Mobile Safari (=webkit). sure, sometimes the skin is useful, but iOS Chrome is actually more like "Safari with some Chrome-ish Extensions".

    *: at least any browser on the App Store; Apple literally won't allow any other renderers. maybe there are homebrew browsers for jailbroken iOS. i don't know.

    --
    "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
  87. Re:How does Safari have anything to do with lockin by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    You don't like Apple because you don't like Apple customers.

    You say that as though it's not a good enough reason.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  88. Yes, way off by Imazalil · · Score: 1

    Except we're talking about technology baselines for the web browser. Which is very very different from user features like Siri or on-screen-multitasking that in no way impact (web)app development.

  89. Lack of government website support by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    No, because if it was then all government websites would require users to use Safari to access them. On OSX only, too.

  90. Remember IE for Mac? by Imazalil · · Score: 1

    I still have a copy of the installation file, its version is 5.2.3. Microsoft gave up on it in 2003.

    I wish Apple would have at least matched their last Safari version number to it. :)

  91. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

    In Canada we still get Android devices with old versions of Android, so people still get brand-new devices with that old piece of crap "Android browser".

  92. safari gets no updates, what does that tell you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stay away

  93. Re:That's because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL - you realize the the original iPhone allowed *only* HTML/JS apps?

    you realize they they ditched that favor of the "app" model?

    You do realize the ditched it because the developers all screamed "WEB APPS SUCK!!"

  94. What a stupid comment to say by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

    What an idiotic comment. Even more so, when coming from supposed professionals.

    Unlike iE, Safari has followed web standards from day one. Unlike Microsoft, Apple didn't think that it was a good idea to integrate itself tightly into the OS, right down to the kernel, making it a shocking security nightmare.

    Apple didn't have to throw out their entire software line and create a new browser from scratch cause they fucked the old one up so badly that it was irredeemable.

    This kind of hyperbolic nonsense not only confuses the issue, it minimizes the damage that Microsoft caused, setting web development back by a good decade.

  95. Re:I never knew by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

    But surely iOS users don't all stick to Safari. Safari came with my work Mac, but nevertheless, I use Chrome. Why wouldn't other people do that? Just because someone blunders into the Apple Trap doesn't mean they all have to drink all the Apple koolaide, does it?

    uhhhh, I think that was kind of the point of the title of article. You didn't even have to RTFA ,just understand the title.
    You know how Internet Explorer came with Windows but people would install other browsers like Netscape?

  96. Re:Why? Applications. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right. Because Android totally was all about web apps from the start... No. It wasn't. They didn't switch gears to accommodate the newfound potential for lock-in. Chrome apps are a better example since Google didn't buy that. A lot more portable between browsers.

    And yes, Microsoft has been a lot more open as of late, whether or not it is because that's what the new guard over there believes to be the best way to compete longterm or to not get left behind is hard to tell. We'll see if they ever get enough market share, I suppose.

    Too bad WebOS never got a chance. Things might look significantly different if it had gained some traction.

  97. Re:It's not just margins by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    Apple is also heavily about the experience. If somebody uses an iPad at work, and it's locked down to only use clumsy software, that person is not going to be happy with the iPad and is less likely to buy one personally. The financial risk isn't a problem for Apple, but there's other reasons why Apple will serve the enterprise last.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  98. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by KGIII · · Score: 1

    You also get regularly raped by moose. I do not see this as a good thing.

    (Canadian citizen - First Nations heritage law, and Canadian property owner - I get raped by moose regularly and I like it.)

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  99. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by KGIII · · Score: 1

    What is bothersome is that we need to recode for Firefox. What the hell? I thought we were supposed to be done with that crap now that IE is almost an acceptable browser. Well, no, it is an acceptable browser but I still can not go back to using it. I can not adapt to the UI very well even though it was my default Windows' web browser for years, I just can not revert to it. I am an Opera user and I am on the beta side and the beta dev browser side - I manage to adapt to those changes (except I hate the disappearing/moving features - a lot) without much trouble at all but I just can not seem to adapt to using IE again and it is not for lack of trying. I have even forced myself to boot to Windows and use it for a whole week at a time. I managed but it was uncomfortable.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  100. Re:I never knew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When someone explodes into red-faced, spittle-flying rage like that, you know that they've lost the argument.

    It's pretty typical behavior for Apple users.

  101. Re:I never knew by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    Not half of the OS market. Half of the mobile OS market. Globally, it has around 15% of the smartphone market share.

  102. Re:That's because... by exomondo · · Score: 1

    You do realize the ditched it because the developers all screamed "WEB APPS SUCK!!"

    That likely was part of it but you're not going to tell me you actually believe the whole iOS App Store ecosystem was just a side-effect of "web apps suck" are you?

  103. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by sabbede · · Score: 1

    Interesting. I'm neither Canadian nor a victim of moose-rape, but a moose did bite my sister once...

  104. Re:It's not just margins by sabbede · · Score: 1

    Wow, awesome points! I hadn't considered it that way, but it makes perfect sense. Enterprise systems require a depth of configurability/customizability that Apple flat out rejects despite their pretense of individuality. They don't do flexibility, and from an enterprise IT standpoint, that's not good. Not so good at security either.

  105. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by doccus · · Score: 1

    Well, I don't give a rats ass which browser is Hip or supported or what the fook. If it loads all my web pages quickly and doesn't crash, like Chrome used to do, then that's fine. Unfortunately, since I don't know how to turn off automatic updates on chrome, I've been stuck with the crashy, increasingly incompatible builds, with that horrible bookmark manager that I luckily managed to revert back, for the moment, untiil they block that option too.. I DREAD the day that I am going to have to switch back to Safari on my Mac. At least I still have Torchbrowser (Chrome, really), which never gets updated anymore so no new buggy builds ...

  106. Apple is a software company by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Well, enterprises don't want to pay 50% or more for comparable hardware on the basis of aesthetics.

    People don't pay more for Apples devices because of the aesthetics - not much anyway. They're nice and all but what people really are paying for is the software. Apple at it's core is a software company. If you put Windows on a Mac or Android on an iPhone (easily done) you'd have no idea if it was made by Apple or Dell unless you looked at the logo. Apple doesn't make their own hardware but they do make their own software and that is what people pay extra for. Their hardware is nice but nothing really special. They just won't sell you their software (usually) unless it is attached to a piece of hardware.

    Don't believe me that Apple is a software company? Here's Steve Jobs himself saying so.

    Apple does make servers, nobody wants them.

    They've made a number of half hearted stabs at making servers over the years but they've never really been serious about it.

    1. Re:Apple is a software company by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Well, I agree with a large part of what you're saying, but you aren't factoring in the hardware design. What's a MacBook Air but a mediocre laptop in a very carefully, artfully, designed case? Leaving aside the absence of functional things like ports, it's a beautiful design. First time I ever opened a Mac Pro, I was impressed. The components were nothing special, but the layout and attention to detail certainly was. Fan cowlings directing airflow through separate heat/ventilation zones, unobtrusive cable management, dust covers.... At the time it was hands-down the best case I ever laid hands on. Probably still better than any under $600. Still not worth $1000 over the price of a comparable PC, or dealing with that lousy OS, but beautiful nonetheless.

  107. Amazed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So Apple is taking a black-box, user-proof, just-trust-us approach to something? Mind = Blown. I have never seen such a thing, except every single other thing Apple does.

  108. Hardware design is just marketing by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Well, I agree with a large part of what you're saying, but you aren't factoring in the hardware design.

    Sure I am. Other companies sell hardware that is comparably nice and that if you sold a Macbook Air with Windows on it that nobody would pay extra for it compared to equivalent Dell or HP units. There are Android phones that are just as nicely designed as the iPhone or at least near enough as makes no difference. I've seen laptops that are just as nice as the Macbook Air. The nice hardware is really just a form of marketing. Make no mistake, it's very nice and it no doubt contributes measurably to Apple's success but it isn't the core reason why people buy Apple products.

    What makes a Mac special is OS X. What makes an iPhone special is iOS. Take those away and you'll see Apple's profit margins evaporate faster than you can say "shareholder lawsuit".

    1. Re:Hardware design is just marketing by sabbede · · Score: 1

      So perhaps then it isn't the design of the software or the hardware, but the overall aesthetic. Both the Air and OSX are "pretty", but lacking in functionality. There's also an (undeserved) reputation for ease of use to consider, which ties back into the lack of functionality/flexibility.

  109. Re:Safari? No. Try the default Android browser. by KGIII · · Score: 1

    Stay the hell out off Canada. The moose are perverts.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  110. Angels On The Head Of A Pin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Crapple is Crapple is Crapple and who fucking cares? Closed source, closed hardware, boring, boring, boring design. Inane content. So LAST YEAR!

    Oh, and EXACTLY SEVEN angels may land on the head of a pin.

    I will brook no dissent!

  111. Capability and ease of use by sjbe · · Score: 1

    So perhaps then it isn't the design of the software or the hardware, but the overall aesthetic. Both the Air and OSX are "pretty", but lacking in functionality.

    OS X is basically a riff on BSD unix underneath. It's roughly as capable as any other version of unix so I'm not sure why you think that. OS X on the Macbook Air is the same as any other Mac. You can argue that you don't like Apple's operating systems and I wouldn't quibble but to say the software lacks functionality is just false.

    If you don't like the hardware on the Air, I get that. It's necessarily a design with some tradeoffs that don't work for everyone. When you go as light as possible you have to leave some stuff behind. But that gets back to my point which is that Apple is really a software company. They put the software in a pretty box but (almost) nobody would give a shit if it ran Windows instead of OS X.

    There's also an (undeserved) reputation for ease of use to consider, which ties back into the lack of functionality/flexibility.

    Disagree that Apple's products haven't earned their reputation for ease of use. I've used Apple products on and off since the early 1980s and I've spent even more time with their competitor's products. As a general rule Apple products tend to be easier to teach to the technologically impaired, require less support and generally work more consistently and with less fuss than the competition. There are exceptions of course but on average it's usually true. That's not to say their products are perfect by any means. But having used, watched and supported others I have to say that the evidence largely points to Apple products being above average in ease of use.

    When someone who is not a geek asks me whether to get a mac versus a PC or iPhone versus Android, I usually point them at the Apple product (budget permitting) because it will be less painful for them 95 times out of 100. When I converted my parents over to a Mac and iPad from Windows machines the number of tech support calls I got went from 1-3/month to 1-2/year. Furthermore if you live vaguely close to an Apple store it's a LOT easier to get support for a Mac than for most PCs.

    1. Re:Capability and ease of use by sabbede · · Score: 1
      I should clarify. OSX has the same potential functionality as any flavor of BSD, but the GUI is designed to hide it. It's part of Apple's "get it out of the way" philosophy. Their products are designed to be used in the way they intend, so those things they expect (or want) people to do is easy, but the side effect is that going any deeper is fraught with stumbling blocks. The programming guidelines are littered with "don't let the user know this, don't let them see that, never let them even think this..."

      Simplicity and depth/flexibility are often incompatible, and Apple takes it to an extreme. Very few controls are exposed, and many are simply inaccessible. Tasks that in windows are a simple matter of opening the control panel, in OSX require opening a terminal and going far deeper than a typical user would be comfortable with.

      Hardware wise, well, we have a staff member for whom we recently got a MacBook Pro. We had to get an overpriced adapter so she could be wired into the network. No ethernet port on a high-end laptop.

      That's right, no ethernet port.

      That might be okay for hipsters who spend all day in a coffee shop showing off their ability to afford a Mac while pretending to be writers, but in an office it's an obscene oversight.