03/20/2008, 1:05pm, EDT
Thursday, March 20th
Software Update pushes Safari on Windows
Apple's Windows version of its Software Update application is now asking users to install Safari 3.1, regardless of whether users actually have Safari installed on their computers. While Software Update comes with all Macs to manage updates, bug fixes, and security patches, the Windows equivalent is installed by Apple applications such as iTunes or QuickTime. Apple could be using Software Update to give the PC version of Safari a push start.
Filed under: software, Apple
Other story tags: iTunes, Windows, Safari, QuickTime, Software Update
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At least users can hide the update. Granted, your average run of the mill user is going to install this anyway I think. I went ahead and installed this on a few client machines, runs well so far.
So now users will have IE, (probably) Firefox, and Safari if they have iTunes / Quicktime installed.. how-day...
Who'd have thought (originally) that iTunes would ever play and sell/rent movies, that Safari would run on an iPod/iPhone (or Windows?), that software would be sold & distributed through iTunes, and that iTunes would use Safari's WebKit to deliver elements of the iTunes store that are more web-like than traditional media players used to be back in the day. Mix in AppleTV and you have a ton of interaction with numerous software and hardware components.
With AppleTV able to rent movies w/out a Mac, and iPhone able to download music/programs w/out going through iTunes, it gets even more complicated.
Maybe we'll see Safari do significantly different things and interact with other "pieces" than it has in the past...even if it's just a delivery mechanism for WebKit.
Maybe some of those iPhone/iPod touch programs/games could be alternatively bought/run on Safari for Mac and Windows? Who knows?
First, chadpengar was talking about shared code on the apple updater, not Safari.
Second, Safari is JUST a stand-alone browser. Regardless of whether it has software used by other products (windows or mac), Safari itself is an application.
One of the problems of 'sharing' code between apps is that you can't update one without it affecting all. So getting Safari 3.1, and it has a bug, that then screws up Mail, as well as anything else using WebKit.
Third, Apple has tons of stand-alone software. iTunes, Safari, FCP, Soundtrack, etc. Who'd have thought (originally) that iTunes would ever play and sell/rent movies, that Safari would run on an iPod/iPhone (or Windows?), that software would be sold & distributed through iTunes,
OK, and what does any of this mean? Apple should be allowed to push Safari to Windows users because they use Safari on an iPhone?
And do you really think Apple thought all of this when they first made everything 5-10 years ago?
and that iTunes would use Safari's WebKit to deliver elements of the iTunes store that are more web-like than traditional media players used to be back in the day.
Well, iTunes has always used webkit, AFAIK. And how is the store being more 'web-like' a good thing? In fact, the reason iTunes became good is that it IS NOT web-like, but more like a real application (as most stores of the time, and even now, are through a browser, and, as such, are web-like. And that's why people don't like them).
With AppleTV able to rent movies w/out a Mac, and iPhone able to download music/programs w/out going through iTunes, it gets even more complicated.
No, it isn't complicated. iPhone and AppleTV are difference devices with different code bases and different update mechanisms. They'd have nothing to do with the Apple Software update program.
Maybe we'll see Safari do significantly different things and interact with other "pieces" than it has in the past...even if it's just a delivery mechanism for WebKit.
Maybe some of those iPhone/iPod touch programs/games could be alternatively bought/run on Safari for Mac and Windows? Who knows?
Yes, because that's just what people want. Programs designed around an iPhone screen on their 15" MBPs. You do realize you can run real applications on computers, right?
And who would want to buy a program for their computer like they do for the iPhone/iPT, with all the restrictions Apple places on them?