Some interesting news at the WWDC today - Apple is releasing Safari 3 for Windows XP/Vista, alongside OS X. In fact, you can now download a public beta.
What does this mean? In my opinion this changes everything.
For many years, web developers have focused on supporting a wide variety of browsers, but in practice, this has often been interpreted as supporting Internet Explorer and Mozilla/Firefox. Very few developers go out of the way to support Safari, for the simple fact that it has been limited to the Mac OS platform and it is used by likely only around 3-4% of user’s, however this figure has been growing quite significantly in the past year. (Opera is another story, it accounts for around 0.2% of users and this never seems to change! Opera users also seem used to switching browsers in the event a site doens’t work for them!).
Now, Safari has a chance to get into the mainstream, and this will force developers to pay attention to it. With Mac gaining market share, there was some additional pressure to support Safari, but now that it is becoming cross-platform, this becomes essential.
It also makes it easier for developers - the three major browser rendering engines; Trident (IE), Gecko (Firefox) and WebKit (Safari) are now easily available on Windows and Mac OS, leaving no excuse for lack of testing or consideration.
Do I see Safari gaining market share? It is a difficult one to judge - on one hand Firefox has been around for ages, and still see’s only 15-20% usage on your average non-geek commercial website, on the other, Apple have twice as many people downloading iTunes downloads than Firefox on Windows - if they can use this as a launching platform then perhaps there is hope.
If nothing else, it will serve to give Microsoft and the Mozilla platform an incentive to focus on supporting web standards, alleviating any kind of development hell that may await; whilst at the same time, increasing developer awareness and ushering in a compatible, cross-platform, web, which can be enjoyed by anyone - wether the computer be white, brushed metal or beige!
Some interesting news at the WWDC today - Apple is releasing Safari 3 for Windows XP/Vista, alongside OS X. In fact, you can now download a public beta.What does this mean? In my opinion this changes everything.For many years, web developers have focused on supporting a wide variety of browsers, but in practice, this has often been interpreted as supporting Internet Explorer and Mozilla/Firefox. Very few developers go out of the way to support Safari, for the simple fact that it has been limited to the Mac OS platform and it is used by likely only around 3-4% of user’s, however this figure has been growing quite significantly in the past year. (Opera is another story, it accounts for around 0.2% of users and this never seems to change! Opera users also seem used to switching browsers in the event a site doens’t work for them!).Now, Safari has a chance to get into the mainstream, and this will force developers to pay attention to it. With Mac gaining market share, there was some additional pressure to support Safari, but now that it is becoming cross-platform, this becomes essential.It also makes it easier for developers - the three major browser rendering engines; Trident (IE), Gecko (Firefox) and WebKit (Safari) are now easily available on Windows and Mac OS, leaving no excuse for lack of testing or consideration.Do I see Safari gaining market share? It is a difficult one to judge - on one hand Firefox has been around for ages, and still see’s only 15-20% usage on your average non-geek commercial website, on the other, Apple have twice as many people downloading iTunes downloads than Firefox on Windows - if they can use this as a launching platform then perhaps there is hope.If nothing else, it will serve to give Microsoft and the Mozilla platform an incentive to focus on supporting web standards, alleviating any kind of development hell that may await; whilst at the same time, increasing developer awareness and ushering in a compatible, cross-platform, web, which can be enjoyed by anyone - wether the computer be white, brushed metal or beige!
Tags: apple, browser, safari, webstandards


