Now, I am an Apple user, an AVID Apple user. I own no less then 15-20 of their products, and an avid Apple defender. But even I said that Safari being automatically checked and enabled for download and installation on Windows machines was going a step too far. I don’t mind if it was there for download, but automatically checked? Meh.
Now, I don’t have a Windows machine, so I haven’t been able to experience this myself, but apparently Apple issued an update to Software Update last week that moved Safari down to a block called “Optional Downloads”, instead of being labeled as an update. Well, it’s a great step, but I still am of the opinion that Apple didn’t go far enough. Safari is still checked by default!?
What’s the big deal? It’s just an update, or even an optional download. Well, that’s fine except that Safari was checked even on machines that didn’t have Safari installed on it. Apple wasn’t the forcing the download on people, but it sure wasn’t making it obvious that it was an optional download.
So my question is, did Apple go far enough? I don’t think they did, I would like to see it unchecked by default as an optional download. I don’t mind if Apple offers the Windows users a better browsing experience. ;) But I do mind if they make the browser seem like it’s a part of an already existing installation.
The problem wouldn’t be so bad, but I know at some point in the near future someone, whether it’s Apple or some other agency , will report that Safari as “x” amount of market share, which me, as an Apple guy will say “Yeah! We have “X”!”. But will it really be a real metric?
Joel Esler
I’m curioius if there are already safari bits (i.e. webkit) already in iTunes/QT for windows that if that was the motivation.
The security folks (me included) would say that the additional software adds to the attack surface area and provides another piece of code that could be vulnerable. But what if the code is already there as part of other applications? My developer-foo wouldn’t allow me to research this properly.
But, then again, you’re probably right that it was a marketing move.