Apple iPhone - Everything you need to know about the Australian iPhone

Apple invites Windows users on Safari

Apple is hoping for another crossover hit.

After bringing iTunes over to Windows, the Mac maker announced on Monday that it is also making its Safari Web browser available for users of Microsoft's operating system. The company released a "public beta" version of Safari 3.0 that runs on Windows XP and Windows Vista, as well as on Mac OS X Tiger.

When Apple first announced plans to bring iTunes to Windows PCs in October 2003, CEO Steve Jobs characterised the move as hell freezing over. These days, though, Apple does much of its work with the Windows world in mind.

Its iPod is used by far more Windows users than Mac users, and its iTunes media player software has been downloaded more than 500 million times by Windows users, Jobs said in his keynote speech on Monday at the Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco.

But the main impetus for bringing Safari to Windows may be the fact that Apple is also pitching Safari and Web-based applications as the way to write programs that run on the iPhone. So given that it is already pouring resources into the browser, trying to get more return on that investment makes sense, analysts said.

Gartner analyst Mike McGuire said the decision to move Safari to Windows is about the iPhone "as much as anything".

McGuire said Safari has some interesting features but added that it is not clear whether that will get it a spot in the Windows Start menu of most PC users.

"You've got to wonder how much people are willing to be promiscuous with the number of browsers they run," McGuire said.

In addition to Microsoft's dominant Internet Explorer browser, Apple also finds itself competing against Mozilla's open-source Firefox browser.

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Talkback 3 comments

  1. Safari for Windows Anonymous -- 12/06/07

    It would not even start up on my machine (XPPro)! Waste of time.

  2. safari on pc Anonymous -- 12/06/07

    soon macs and pcs will be the same and each will have brought their worst features with them - safari being a great example
    1. brushed metal - yycchh
    2. resize just from a tiny thingimy down in the rt hand corner - you must be kidding
    3. most of the tab implementations are lame (unfortunately that goes for all the browsers. Like how can I open a new tab without falling over my fingers holding down control) only Maxthon and Firefox (via an add-on) allow me just to drag a link and voila!
    4 Sorry Steveie jobsy - doesn't seem very fast to me - neither on my mac OR my PC.
    But I guess it works ok - however as a web developer it means yet another browser to start re-writing code for (probably) - tho I guess just about anything beats I.E. !

  3. DO NOT USE iTUNES OR SAFARI ON YOUR WINDOWS VISTA OR WINDOWS XP COMPUTER Anonymous -- 17/06/07

    DO NOT download or use APPLE's ITUNES, SAFARI OR QUICKTIME FOR WINDOWS VISTA OR WINDOWS XP!

    The saying "There is No Such Thing as a Free Lunch" couldn't be more true in the case of iTunes/Quicktime from Apple Inc.

    iTunes & Quicktime for Windows contains Spyware -- software used to track usage of your computer and alter its operation. In addition, running these programs on Windows Vista can often crash your computer.

    Personal information is transfered by Quicktime/iTunes, without your knowledge, to Apple computer, and its marketing partners, over the Internet.

    IF YOU ALREADY HAVE iTUNES OR QUICKTIME INSTALLED ON YOUR NEW DESKTOP COMPUTER OR LAPTOP YOU CAN REMOVE IT BY GOING TO THE "PROGRAMS AND FEATURES" CONTROL PANEL (in VISTA), OR IF YOU ARE USING XP, BY GOING TO THE "ADD/REMOVE SOFTWARE" CONTROL PANEL.

    How Apple's spyware scheme works:
    Since at least the year 2000, the Quicktime (and now iTunes) installer from Apple copied several programs, without the user's permission or knowledge, which permanently altered the user's Windows system.
    Removing some of the components did not help. Each time the user visits ANY Apple or related website that has uses"Quicktime", something installed by iTunes causes at least two invisible background processes (qttask.exe and ituneshelper.exe) to get installed in the user's computer's Startup Programs list which get automatically launced. The claim for "ituneshelper.exe" is that it "required" for burning CD's, but it does not make sense why you need an INVISIBLE BACKGROUND PROGRAM running on your system 24 hours a day just so you can burn CD's once in a while. No other CD burning software has such a requirement.
    The other program "qttask.exe" is also spyware with apparently no other purpose.
    WHEN THESE PROGRAMS AUTOMATICALLY CONNECT TO APPLE'S SERVERS, BEHIND YOUR BACK, APPLE USES YOUR IP ADDRESS, AND OTHER INFORMATION TRANSFERRED TO APPLE FROM YOUR COMPUTER, TO PERSONALLY IDENTIFY AND TRACK YOU ON THE INTERNET FOR MARKETING (AND OTHER) PURPOSES.
    APPLE INC. HAS A HISTORY OF SUCH ACTIVITIES AS WELL AS CASES WHERE EMPLOYEES USED THE INFORMATION GATHERED FROM MILLIONS OF COMPUTER USERS TO STALK PEOPLE THEY KNOW.

    I have since switched to alternatives (see below), but I was still stuck with Apple's spyware for weeks before I was able to remove it.

    ALTERNATIVES TO APPLE'S QUICKTIME/ITUNES SPYWARE
    =================================
    IF YOU ABSOLUTELY NEED TO PLAY QUICKTIME (AND OTHER TYPES) OF MOVIES, YOU CAN DOWNLOAD "VIDEOLAN" FROM http://www.videolan.org/
    VIDEOLAN PLAYS QUICKTIME AND MOST OTHER FORMATS IN EXISTANCE INCLUDING DVD, MPEG ETC.

    As far as music downloading service goes, there are many many alternatives including MusicMatch.com, Rahpsody.com, etc...

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