Viewing PF from Brand New Safari Browser on Macbook

  • Thread starter Thread starter G01
  • Start date Start date
Click For Summary
SUMMARY

This forum discussion centers around user experiences with the Safari browser on a new MacBook. Users express mixed feelings about Safari's performance, with some praising its stability while others report frequent crashes and compatibility issues with certain websites. Alternatives like Firefox and Linux distributions such as Ubuntu are recommended for better compatibility and user experience. The conversation highlights the ongoing debate between Mac and PC users, emphasizing personal preferences and specific use cases.

PREREQUISITES
  • Familiarity with macOS versions, particularly Tiger and Leopard.
  • Understanding of web browser compatibility issues.
  • Knowledge of alternative operating systems like Linux and Ubuntu.
  • Basic troubleshooting skills for software conflicts and crashes.
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the latest features and updates in Safari for macOS.
  • Learn about Firefox's compatibility advantages over Safari.
  • Explore Ubuntu's installation process and user-friendly features.
  • Investigate common troubleshooting techniques for browser crashes on macOS.
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for Mac users experiencing browser issues, web developers ensuring cross-browser compatibility, and anyone considering switching to alternative operating systems like Linux or Ubuntu.

G01
Science Advisor
Gold Member
Messages
2,704
Reaction score
19
I am now viewing PF from my brand new Safari browser on my brand new Macbook!

I am so glad I got this. Loving it already!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Welcome to the good side of the Force. :cool:
 
Noooo Macs are the dark side... They should be banned :P
 
Congrats G01 on seeing the light! :biggrin:
 
I'm really happy for you, its so much fun to have new things.{mutters under breath} {even if it is a Mac}
 
I wish i could afford a Mach book.
 
Danger said:
Welcome to the good side of the Force. :cool:
The same.

One dark side of Safari is that it is not particularly good with web pages written by IT maroons who think that the internet is Internet Exploder and ActiveX. You might want to download Firefox. Many financial and medical web sites simply don't work properly with Safari. Most do work with Firefox. Some of those that don't work with Safari or Firefox do work with the Mac version of Exploder. For a select few you have two choices: use a PC or take your business elsewhere.
 
One of us..one of us...one of us...

I like just walking around the house holding my MacBook. How did they make it simply feel so nice?
 
PC ftw. You all can go take your virus free, however, interfacably challenged computers elseware. I'm happy with Vista. My computer is fast as lightning. I never get viruses. The GUI is amazing, and I have a build in fingerprint scanner.

Not a fan of Mac is the main point of my argument :biggrin:.
 
  • #10
Math Jeans said:
PC ftw. You all can go take your virus free, however, interfacably challenged computers elseware. I'm happy with Vista. My computer is fast as lightning. I never get viruses. The GUI is amazing, and I have a build in fingerprint scanner.
Phhff, forget Mac & Windows - bring on the Linux! Faster and more stable than Vista, with the added benefit of being virus free and highly customisable. Okay perhaps the interface isn't as pretty but it's far more usable than either Windows or Mac :-p
 
  • #11
Hootenanny said:
Phhff, forget Mac & Windows - bring on the Linux! Faster and more stable than Vista, with the added benefit of being virus free and highly customisable. Okay perhaps the interface isn't as pretty but it's far more usable than either Windows or Mac :-p

If I even knew where to start with it, I'd probably try it. Then again, the only reason I'm using a PC is because of that problem DH mentioned where not all ITiots set up sites compatible with anything other than Explorer on a PC (I fought that and at least got Firefox compatible sites at work...and FINALLY they unbroke the thing they broke that made it incompatible with Safari, so I can use Safari again when I'm at home...one of the IT guys in the department I hope to move into is a major Mac fan, so I'm REALLY looking forward to being able to work in an office where there is Mac support again so I can rid myself of this clunky windows beast).
 
  • #12
Congrats! and I agree with D H about Firefox. I am absolutely FED UP with Safari, and if I get any down time this weekend I intend to download Firefox. Safari crashes my imac constantly. So is it the ultra thin one? huh? huh? huh? :D
 
  • #13
Ms Music said:
Congrats! and I agree with D H about Firefox. I am absolutely FED UP with Safari, and if I get any down time this weekend I intend to download Firefox. Safari crashes my imac constantly. So is it the ultra thin one? huh? huh? huh? :D

Funny, I've never had any problems with Safari other than the few incompatible sites, and they never crashed anything. You might want to just try reinstalling Safari...maybe something didn't install right or you have a software conflict of some sort. People have reported Firefox crashing their Macs over in the computer forum, though I haven't had that problem either.
 
  • #14
G01, did you get the super-thin one, the "Air" or whatever they call it?
 
  • #15
MIH, that 'Air' is one sweet machine. I chose the MacBook (rather than Pro or Air) primarily for financial reasons. I can't imagine ever needing the power of the Pro, and the Air doesn't have an optical drive.
 
  • #16
Moonbear said:
If I even knew where to start with it, I'd probably try it.
Ubuntu (www.ubuntu.com) is probably the most user-friendly. Full graphical installer with very good hardware support. Go for it MB, come over to the dark side :wink:
 
  • #17
Hootenanny said:
Ubuntu (www.ubuntu.com) is probably the most user-friendly. Full graphical installer with very good hardware support. Go for it MB, come over to the dark side :wink:

I'm afraid it's not likely to be any more compatible with our network servers than the Macs are. The moment our IT department gets overtaken by people who actually know what they're doing and set everything up to be fully compatible and offer support across platforms, I'll go for it (because if I screw it up, I can always go back to macs). I also still need Windoze for a government grants software package that can't keep up with Mac upgrades (I don't expect anything better from the government though).
 
  • #18
Danger said:
MIH, that 'Air' is one sweet machine. I chose the MacBook (rather than Pro or Air) primarily for financial reasons. I can't imagine ever needing the power of the Pro, and the Air doesn't have an optical drive.

I have the Yael Naim (she does the "New Soul" song) CD - that's as close as I'll be getting to a Mac. LOL

We did get one of the ASUS EEE PCs at work the other day for evaluation. That thing is SO tiny. I am going to test drive it around campus next week and see how good it is for taking notes and sending email.
 
  • #19
Math Is Hard said:
I have the Yael Naim (she does the "New Soul" song) CD

Never heard of her, but I'll pull it up on iTunes and check it out. :biggrin:
 
  • #20
Moonbear, I would consider you lucky! My Safari crashes DAILY. Literally. And it crashes the whole system about two times per month and have to reboot. But then I use my computer pretty hard. It is VERY normal for us to have a few web pages open, photoshop, itunes, and probably something else. So maybe in my house it is more user error? <giggle> But I *do* love my mac!
 
  • #21
That sounds a bit weird. I've had Safari on my last 2 Macs, and it has not crashed even once. I love it. My previous machines had IE, and it went down like a ton of bricks on a regular basis. The iBook that I used before this new MacBook had Firefox as well as Safari, but I never bothered using it. Greg (or Chroot?) once recommended Opera, but it wouldn't load onto the machine that I had at the time. Haven't tried it since.
 
  • #22
I like this version of the commercial. heh heh


even funnier..



and just twisted:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #23
Ms Music said:
Moonbear, I would consider you lucky! My Safari crashes DAILY. Literally. And it crashes the whole system about two times per month and have to reboot. But then I use my computer pretty hard. It is VERY normal for us to have a few web pages open, photoshop, itunes, and probably something else. So maybe in my house it is more user error? <giggle> But I *do* love my mac!

I've had way more than that open at a time. The only thing that ever crashes my Mac is MS Office (I should have never let that MS contaminant on there, but what can you do, that's what everyone I work with uses, so I need to use it too). That's actually a pretty light workload for me. When I used Macs exclusively, I'd have safari and mail open all the time, iTunes usually, Photoshop definitely, sometimes Illustrator as well, Word, EndNote and Excel, and sometimes Powerpoint. Then, just to give it a challenge, I'd open up StatView in OS 9 (that's one thing I'm glad to have a PC for...the stats packages on Macs are pretty sad, though I haven't had a chance to try JMP yet because it's just so expensive).
 
  • #24
Math Is Hard said:
I like this version of the commercial. heh heh

:smile:
 
  • #25
Math Is Hard said:
I like this version of the commercial. heh heh


:smile: Yeah, they lost me on the Air. I can't figure out anyone who would want a computer that can't play a CD.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #26
Moonbear said:
The only thing that ever crashes my Mac is MS Office (I should have never let that MS contaminant on there, but what can you do, that's what everyone I work with uses, so I need to use it too).

I've got Neo Office, which is an open-source application along the same line as Gimp and Inkscape. The file formats are compatible with MS Office, and it doesn't have that hideous Microsoft stigma attached.
 
  • #27
Moonbear said:
I've had way more than that open at a time. The only thing that ever crashes my Mac is MS Office (I should have never let that MS contaminant on there, but what can you do, that's what everyone I work with uses, so I need to use it too). That's actually a pretty light workload for me. When I used Macs exclusively, I'd have safari and mail open all the time, iTunes usually, Photoshop definitely, sometimes Illustrator as well, Word, EndNote and Excel, and sometimes Powerpoint. Then, just to give it a challenge, I'd open up StatView in OS 9 (that's one thing I'm glad to have a PC for...the stats packages on Macs are pretty sad, though I haven't had a chance to try JMP yet because it's just so expensive).

Hmmmm, what versions? I have Tiger, and my Safari (I think) is current... I was actually online a few weeks ago for the ENTIRE WEEKEND trying to figure out why safari was crashing every THIRTY seconds. Hundreds of others were too. I can't even remember off the top of my head the program that was at fault, but it was something I had just downloaded. I thought Safari was extremely unstable. I am VERY curious as to why yours is just so darned good! :biggrin:
 
  • #28
Ms Music said:
Hmmmm, what versions? I have Tiger, and my Safari (I think) is current... I was actually online a few weeks ago for the ENTIRE WEEKEND trying to figure out why safari was crashing every THIRTY seconds. Hundreds of others were too. I can't even remember off the top of my head the program that was at fault, but it was something I had just downloaded. I thought Safari was extremely unstable. I am VERY curious as to why yours is just so darned good! :biggrin:

If you just downloaded some other program, you should suspect that one as the incompatible culprit. I used Tiger for years (ever since it first came out), and have recently switched to Leopard on one of my machines (I still have an older powerbook running Tiger because I'm not quite convinced it can handle Leopard). Basically, I've been using Macs since OS 9 and have used every version of OS X since without running into any problems like that. Which Mac do you have? Is it an issue of insufficient memory? I used to have problems with OS 9 on those old fruit-flavored iMacs because my mentor was too cheap to buy enough memory for them, so always max out on whatever memory I can get for the current model I'm buying (for applications like Photoshop, you have to have a lot of RAM...that's a memory hog and something I HAVE to use with high resolution images and other applications open).
 
  • #29
Math Is Hard said:
G01, did you get the super-thin one, the "Air" or whatever they call it?

Nah, I find that that isn't worth the money, considering you need an external CD drive, and I would break it within 10 minutes after getting it!:rolleyes:

I got the black version of the MacBook.

The one thing that is taking time to get used to is the inability to make windows full-screen. I do miss that sometimes, but I think "Spaces" and the ability to get on my school network in about half the time it takes to log on on a windows machine (you always have to download new virus protection updates before you log on on a windows machine) definitely make up for the loss of full screen windows.
 
  • #30
Ditto with the memory thing. I've had the original iMac (lime flavored), the G4 Half-Dome flat screen, and now the latest MacBook. The only persistent crashes on ANY of them, is with the first one, before I maxed out the memory.
And lately, the G4 has started to act up since Benny (my 3-year-old) knocked a full cup of coffee right into the motherboard. Now I get the gray death-screen if anything is plugged into the third USB port. Small price.

I've used MS Explorer, Netscape, Safari, and Firefox and all were stable. Firefox is the finest by inches over Safari. Explorer was the worst, by miles (who'd've thought that?)

Perhaps ironically, MS Office for Mac works better than Office for Windows, in my opinion. There are tiny subtle differences between them; perhaps I'm more used to the Mac version at home, rather than the Windows version at work.

Primarily I appreciate the Mac architecture, both the hardware and software. The "Mac vs PC wars" are silly and funny, but not worth the steam that some people get into.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
3
Views
369
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 7 ·
Replies
7
Views
2K
  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
3K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
3K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
5K
Replies
3
Views
1K