June 11, 2007: At Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, CEO Steve Jobs unveils Safari 3 for Windows, bringing the company’s web browser to PCs for the first time. Apple pitches Safari as the ...
The debate is still on about why Apple Inc. decided to develop a version of its Safari browser for Windows. One of the most popular ideas online — though one that doesn’t appear to be widely supported ...
Just hours after Apple Inc. released a Windows version of Safari yesterday, security researchers had uncovered more than a half-dozen vulnerabilities in the browser beta, including at least three that ...
If there's one thing the Windows world has been clamoring for, it's another web browser. Right. Apple has heard the cries and released Safari for Windows. I've been using Safari since the day of its ...
Apple has just released an incremental point update for Safari 5 on both the Mac and PC, Safari 5.0.3, as well as Safari 4.1.3 for Mac OS X Tiger. Safari 5.0.3 is largely a security and stability ...
Whether you took Mozzy’s stance that Apple quietly slipping Safari into its Software Update for Windows users “bordered on malware” or just didn’t give a shit, looks like you’ll have to admit it ...
SAN FRANCISCO -- Apple Inc. launched a version of its Safari Web browser for Windows-based PCs on Monday, adding yet another tentacle to its multipronged encroachment on Microsoft Corp.'s turf.
What looks like Apple Inc.’s Safari Web browser for Mac OS X, works like Safari for the Mac, but isn’t Safari for the Mac? Answer: A beta version of Safari unveiled this week by Apple CEO Steve Jobs ...
I am of two minds about this. Either that porting Safari over to Windows was so easy that there was really no point in not doing it as it was already built into something like iTunes. Or that the port ...
Like Opera and Chrome, Safari 4 is exceedingly fast. On all the sites I visited, it seemed to bring up pages more quickly than either Internet Explorer or Firefox. But there's more to the browser than ...
Apple is becoming a favorite target of security researchers these days. In April, there was the $10,000 CanSecWest hack a Mac contest, and today there was Safari. Or the public beta of Safari for ...
I'm not sure why Apple even bothered in the first place. Especially since shoehorning their aesthetic into Windows (a la iTunes) looks so terrible. Safari users are basically the Internet Explorer ...
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