Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 28th Feb 2009 11:47 UTC
Apple A few days ago, Apple surprised everyone by releasing the first beta of Safari 4, the company's latest version of their WebKit browser. While I generally love Safari on the Mac (my browser of choice on that side of the fence), I've never felt as comfortable with it on the Windows side of things. In any case, this latest beta has made a very bold move in the interface department, and I'm sad to say that it's not for the better. Let me explain where it went wrong for Apple.
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phoudoin
Member since:
2006-06-09

Some people are so resistant to change!

Change and progress are *not* synonymous words.
Change become progress only when it's better after than before. Resisting a change that make things worse make as much sense than embracing one who does improve them. You can't say resistance to change is wrong until you've enough proof this change is better than before.
It's not like human history lacks example of change that was promoted like the best thing since fire and were in the end disaster...

Back to topic, Safari's UI strongness or weakness will never rank very high in human history biggest changes, so...

Speaking of change, Safari 4 was the first browser in over 2 years that got me to ditch Firefox on my Mac.

Doesn't make automatically Safari 4 on Windows the best browser change in the recent period, maybe because on *this* platform people saw another one recently, called Chrome, against they made comparison. In particular when these browsers both share same WebKit engine below, it make much sense to compare its user interface experience...

The "Title Bar" was the biggest waste of space on a browser, any browser.

Since long and among pretty much every windows managers, the "Title Bar" space/value rate is very, very low. The fact people see it more obviously today with the browser title bar is only because that's more and more pretty much the only app they open...

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