This is a discussion on Apple's Safari Upgrade Adds HTML 5, CSS Web Fonts within the Technology BUZZzzzzz forums, part of the Discussweb Technology Box category; Apple's Safari Upgrade Adds HTML 5, CSS Web Fonts : The latest version also includes new drag-and-drop bookmarks, ...
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| Apple's Safari Upgrade Adds HTML 5, CSS Web Fonts : The latest version also includes new drag-and-drop bookmarks, easy-to-organize tabs, and integrated search that shows the number of matches in a page. Apple on Tuesday introduced the latest version of the Safari Web browser. Safari 3.1, which is available at no charge for Mac and Windows PCs through Apple's Web site, supports additional Web standards. It also loads Web pages and runs JavaScript faster than previous versions. On the standards front, the upgrade supports new video and audio tags in HTML 5, and animations created through the use of cascading style sheets. The browser also supports CSS Web fonts. "Safari supports the latest audio, video, and animation standards for an industry-leading Web 2.0 experience," Philip Schiller, senior VP for worldwide product marketing, said in a statement. Besides better standards support, the latest version also includes new drag-and-drop bookmarks, easy-to-organize tabs, and integrated search that shows the number of matches in a page. In addition, there's a built-in RSS reader for news feeds. On the Mac, Safari 3.1 requires Mac OS X Leopard or Tiger version 10.4.11 or higher. The browser needs 256 MB of memory and can run on an Intel (NSDQ: INTC)-based or PowerPC-based Mac. On Windows, the upgrade needs the same amount of memory, Windows XP or Windows Vista, and at least a 500-MHz Intel Pentium processor. Besides making the browser available through its Web site, Apple also plans to distribute it to Mac users through the company's software update application. In terms of market share, Safari trails Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) Internet Explorer, the most popular Web browser, and Mozilla Firefox. Apple in December released a security patch for several serious flaws in Safari. If exploited, the vulnerabilities could allow remote code execution, denial of service, data exposure, cross-site scripting, privilege escalation, and file deletion. -Shanthi ![]() |
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| Apple Faces Time Machine Patent Lawsuit: The lawsuit is based on Mirror Worlds' concept of organizing files in a time-based stack or stream. Apple last week was sued in the Eastern District of Texas for infringing on the patents of Mirror Worlds, a company that used to make desktop search and organization software. The lawsuit claims that Apple's computers, iPods, iPhones, and Mac OS X operating system infringe on Mirror Worlds' alternative to the desktop metaphor: organizing files in a time-based stack or stream. Users of Apple's Time Machine software in Mac OS X 10.5 or its Cover Flow view in iTunes should immediately recognize this method of interacting with computer files. While the Eastern District of Texas is notorious in legal circles as the favored venue of patent trolls, Mirror Worlds' patents appear to have more merit than most because the ideas expressed aren't obvious, at least compared to controversial patents like Amazon's 1-Click patent. They reflect the work of Yale computer scientists Eric Freeman and David Gelernter, who in the mid-1990s recognized that the desktop metaphor has its limits and proposed to organize computer documents in a time-ordered stream. At the time, there was nothing like it. Or was there? Though Apple did not respond to a request for comment, it may be able to argue that the HyperCard software it developed in the 1980s represents prior art, thereby invalidating some or all of Mirror World's claims. A more likely outcome, however, is a quiet settlement. Mirror Worlds' attorneys did not respond to a request for comment. Mirror Worlds began operating in 1997 and shipped its first enterprise software product, Scopeware, in March 2001. In 2002, it released a desktop product called Scopeware Vision. The company closed its doors on May 15, 2004. An August 8, 2004 article by James Fallows in The New York Times suggests that Mirror Worlds' backers pulled the plug because Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) "indicated that it would include disk-search functions in Longhorn, its next version of Windows, scheduled for release in 2006." That version of Windows, now known as Windows Vista, was released in January 2007. Fallows observed that Scopeware Vision was "an elegant contender for the role of 'Google (NSDQ: GOOG) for your own computer.'" Google, as it turned out, was also a contender for that title and to date has been holding its own against Vista's internal search engine. Mirror Worlds' backers, it seems, ran from the wrong company -Shanthi ![]() |
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