Safari 4

Jim Jumps In

"Here's a brief summary of Safari 4 from the Apple Blog. I've installed it, and like it fine," writes Jim Hamm, De Prez.
Apple Releases Safari 4, Posted: 08 Jun 2009 04:40 PM PDT

Apple today stripped the beta tag from, and released, Safari 4 into the wild. Safari 4, which has been in beta since February, offers a host of features and enhancements to what Apple claims is the “World’s Fastest Browser.”

Safari 4 features an updated user interface, and numerous under-the-hood enhancements, all of which contribute to a great new browser, built with the user in mind. If you’ve been using Safari 3, this is a fantastic update you’ll definitely want to install immediately. If you’ve been using the Safari 4 beta for the last few months, some changes have been made, and stability has improved. No matter what browser you currently use, Safari 4 is a gorgeous app that puts the content up front and gets out of your way while you surf.

Safari 4 Top Site Search

Searching in Safari has seen a few feature updates. You can use the new Search bar, which auto-completes terms, offers suggestions, and displays a list of recent searches for you. Pretty standard stuff. But here’s the cool part: Let’s say you want to search for a site you’ve been to in the past, but can’t remember where it was. Simply visit your Top Sites page and use the Search box at the bottom. Safari will search through your history and display thumbnail previews of the search results via Cover Flow in the browser window — making it much easier to find what you’re looking for. The Cover Flow feature also works with your Bookmarks.

Shortcuts

Apple has added a few options to the Customize Toolbar preferences. You can now add buttons for Top Sites, Bookmarks Bar, Site Information, Email Page and more. To make room for these buttons, Apple has removed the Stop/Reload button and made it part of the URL bar.

Safari 4 buttons

For those who were using Safari 4 beta and didn’t care for the Tabs-On-Top feature, you’ll feel all warm and fuzzy when you find the Tab bar has been moved back to its Safari 3 location below the toolbar.

While browsers have had the ability to reduce or enlarge text for a long time, Safari 4 goes one step further by allowing you to zoom an entire page in and out, keeping the content and overall look of the site the way it was intended. Of course, you can also zoom the text only, and support for external style sheets is available, so you can choose your fonts, sizes and colors for all web sites.

A few other nifty features of Safari 4 include inline viewing of PDFs without cumbersome plugins, the ability to “clip” a web page to create a Dashboard Widget of the page, the ability to save images directly into your iPhoto library, and mail the contents of a page (in its full HTML glory) with the click of a button.

Safari 4 Under the Hood

The new JavaScript engine (Nitro) in Safari 4, which boasts speeds four times faster than Firefox 3, four-and-a-half times faster than Safari 3, and eight times faster than Internet Explorer 8, was noticeably improved over previous Safari versions — especially when loading JavaScript-heavy pages such as my iGoogle page.

Page rendering speeds have also been improved by up to three times, according to Apple’s statements. Not having any scientific data to back up my claim, I’ll say that it is fast. Very fast. Considering Safari 4 will run as a 64-bit app under Snow Leopard when it’s released in September, Safari with its Nitro JavaScript engine will be speeding along at a pace that will leave other browsers envious.

Safari 4 also boasts support for HTML 5, for the use of offline technologies, and some pretty cool CSS 3 effects such as animations, fonts and media effects. It’s also the only browser I know of that supports ICC color profiles out of the box, so images appear in the browser as they were intended to.

Of particular interest to web site designers and developers is the ability to invoke Safari 4’s Web Inspector to get a closer look at the underpinnings of a web site. You can view the CSS and HTML code, script and database information, as well as beautiful graphs displaying site statistics, such as image size.

Safari 4 Web Inspector

Firefox, with its plethora of extensions available, has been my browser of choice for a long time. But Safari does offer one thing that Firefox just can’t seem to catch hold-of in Mac OS X — speed! Safari 4 just blows the doors off even Firefox 3.5 beta. And it does offer some customization capability via InputManagers (not supported by Apple, by the way). Overall, if you can live without dozens of extensions for Firefox, Safari is by far the best browser for the Mac.

Safari 4 is available now as a free download for Mac OS X 10.4.11 or later and requires that you install Security Update 2009-002. You can download Safari 4 from Apple’s web site. # # #

Safari 4 Top Sites

One of the appealing aspects to me of Safari 4 is Top Sites. This page is similar to the Speed Dial in Opera, only much fancier. I tried to find an entry in Safari 4 Help on this topic, couldn't find one, so I'm making up what follows based on my own experience.

Top Sites is a page in the browser that displays previews of pages from your history list (an assumption on my part that the history list is where these previews are generated from).
In the upper left corner of the browser is a symbol that looks like this: Click on that image to get a full page of images like the one on the left (but without the symbols in the upper left corner as shown in this image). In the lower left corner of that page you'll see an Edit button. Click on that button and then you will see those symbols in the upper left corner of the images.
Notice that the stick pin in this image is highlighted. Clicking on the stick pin toggles the highlight. When highlighted, that prevents that image from being replaced as you visit other sites. Clicking on the 'X' removes that image from the Top Sites, everything shifts left, and a new image is created in the lower right corner of the page - which will be the next page found in your history list. In the Edit mode, you can move the images around to be in the order that you like, and I'm assuming that the order is left to right from the top.
Items that are not pinned will be updated with previews of pages from your bookmark history, picking off the topmost sites as needed. (Another assumption on my part.)
In the lower right corner of Top Sites there is a button to select the size of the images. The smaller the size, the more images you see. The options are Small, Medium, and Large. With Small, you get 6 across and 4 deep. Medium gets you 4 x 3. Large gets you 3 x 2. The image size adjusts with the browser window size.
When you've finished editing the images, click on the Done button in the lower left corner.
Enjoy Safari 4!