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Re:"put him on an island"

That's exactly what I need to do with my boss !

posted by : Pascal Monett, 29 July 2010 Complain about this comment
More BS from Apple

HTML5 is not a standard.

posted by : Dan, 29 July 2010 Complain about this comment
OMG...

Sandboxing is pretty much ALWAYS a good idea. If I were them, I would make sandboxing each tab a priority. When I heard that Firefox tabs were each going to be their own separate instance, I was thrilled. If you can't squash an exploit, putting it in a tiny cage is the next best thing.

That is, and always has been, the solution to malware. If you don't trust it, but want to use it anyway, sandbox the software and be careful what you let it see. If I were on Windows and wanted to play a game that was given out free because it had nasty malware, I would want sandboxing pretty badly.

If you take an insane psychopathic axe murderer and put him on an island with no animals or people and enough food to live on, he's suddenly pretty manageable.

posted by : Jason Goatcher, 29 July 2010 Complain about this comment
More PR

Extensions are old hat. Nothing new here. I didn't even realize it didn't have extensions. I used Safari for a while, but I don't use it anymore. Their drive by install policy was bad. That browser is insecure at this point, and my impression of Apple is that they don't take action fast enough, and hence don't put a priority on security.

Their PR guy made this out like it's some super futuristic feature that others have to compete with. Safari's market share is one of the lowest and for good reason--the browser just isn't very good.

"Brian Croll, Apple's VP of OS X product marketing, trilled, "We're thrilled to see so many leading developers creating great extensions and think our users are going to love being able to customise Safari.""

That's sad that he hasn't realized that this sort of thing has been around for a very long time. And, who are the leading developers? Developers of browser extensions are leaders in the software development field? What is going to make those extensions any more spectacular than those developed for other browsers? And why do you need extensions to customize the browser?

posted by : Jim B., 28 July 2010 Complain about this comment
RE: What?

To the comment from the guy below, the article states developer, allowing us to us extensions of all classes for those specified.

posted by : jon, 28 July 2010 Complain about this comment
What?

"The browser also benefits from additional extension support, which will let developers start using web standards like HTML5, CSS3 and Javascript, though not Flash."

What nonsense is this? All those standards, as well as the proprietary Flash, can already be used and have nothing to do with Safari's extensions. A very cack-handed effort to include dig at Apple's justified campaign against Flash.

More "journalism" from the Inquirer. *shakes head*

posted by : Bilgepipe, 28 July 2010 Complain about this comment

Apple updates its Safari web browser with extensions

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