TK
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(Mar 18, 2008 - 4:07 PM)
I vaguely recall some of the speed claims for the initial release of Safari for Windows.
Like the purported speed advantage of Firefox (which is my favored browser), much of that "competitive speed" comes from over-aggressive caching that causes the browser to miss changed content at times.
However, with caching turned off, Safari Win was the slowest of the three browsers on my machine. In fact, with caching turned all the way off, rendering was so slow as to be unusable.
Kudos to Apple for relatively good support for web standards so far -- and I'm definitely glad to be able to test the pages I develop in Safari, since the Mac version seems to amount for around 5% of int'l browser share. But using Safari for Windows even a little helps suggest why the Safari Windows int'l share is a negligible .07%.
(I also believe a big damper on adoption of Safari by Windows users is that Safari 3 for Windows came with a very, heavy, dark, and "smudgy" default font view, more suitable to the gamma level used by the Mac's Aqua graphic interface. But even with the fonts optimized for Window's darker gamma, Apple style fonts simply don't look nearly as clean or sharp to most Windows users.)