Apple has just posted a new version of its Safari web browser, featuring improvements to Javascript, CSS, and speed, amongst other things.
I’m intrigued that, in addition to the Windows version, Apple is still maintaining current releases for a previous version of the operating system—something they’ve largely avoided in the past.
Safari’s trajectory almost mirrors that of iTunes: third party product (KHTML) integrated into the operating system as a standard component (web browsing), becoming cross-platform, and a critical component in the functioning (and saleability) of the iPod. But I think it’s going to be more than that. There are clues that Apple wants to get into the web application game on a larger scale than the disappointing .Mac offering. Supporting that by having control of a fast, standards-compliant but aggressively featureful browser is pretty logical.
What’s more, Apple is unusually open in its road-map for the product. Dave Hyatt and his team have unprecedented visibility—Apple engineers typically are virtually anonymous and almost never blog about their own work. The openness around Safari development is probably required by its open-source origins, but it also must reassure third parties intending to base products around Safari’s Webkit renderer.
With this release, and the forthcoming Firefox 3 and Internet Explorer 8, it’s an exciting time for followers of web technology development.