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Safari - how Apple built the engine that powers almost every modern web browser

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Manage episode 437839118 series 3587226
Content provided by Graham Bower and Charlie Sorrel, Graham Bower, and Charlie Sorrel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Graham Bower and Charlie Sorrel, Graham Bower, and Charlie Sorrel or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Safari is one of Apple’s most enduring and popular apps, with versions running on Mac, iPhone, iPad, and even Vision Pro. But it wasn’t always the behemoth we know today.

When it launched in 2003, Safari faced fierce competition from Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, a bruiser of a browser with over 95% market share. Safari didn’t seem to stand a chance. And yet, just twelve years later, Microsoft gave up the fight, scrapping Internet Explorer in favor of Edge, a new app based on code borrowed from Safari.

So, how did Safari deliver this knock-out blow? In this episode we go back to an era when Apple championed standards, interoperability, and open source. We’ll learn why Steve Jobs argued passionately against proprietary platforms. And we’ll discover how Apple handed its crown jewels over to a bitter rival.

This is a David versus Goliath story of a plucky little web browser that went on to conquer the world.

LINKS

Full video of MacWorld SF 2003, where Steve Jobs introduced the first Safari beta.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTF9wnTPpK0

Don Melton, former director of internet technologies at Apple, explains how Safari got it’s name.
https://donmelton.com/2012/12/19/when-i-first-heard-the-name-safari/

Clip of Apple Worldwide Developers Conference 2007, where Steve Jobs introduces Safari for Windows.
https://www.cnet.com/videos/steve-jobs-announces-safari-for-windows/

Webkit.org
https://webkit.org

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Safari - how Apple built the engine that powers almost every modern web browser (00:00:00)

2. Teaser questions (00:01:25)

3. What is WebKit? (00:03:37)

4. Outlining the three parts to this episode (00:05:22)

5. Setting the scene (00:06:15)

6. How Safari got its name (00:07:06)

7. 1991 Tim Berners Lee invents the Web (00:08:35)

8. 1993 NCSA Mosaic web browser (00:09:25)

9. 1994 Netscape Navigator introduces JavaScript (00:10:45)

10. 1995 Microsoft Internet Explorer (00:13:04)

11. 2000 Konqueror web browser (00:18:08)

12. Dave Hyatt, Camino, and Firefox (00:18:35)

13. Apple's deal with Microsoft (00:19:08)

14. MacWorld SF 2003 - Safari beta launch (00:20:54)

15. Open source and KHTML (00:30:05)

16. Safari for Windows (00:43:07)

17. Google uses WebKit for Chrome (00:46:35)

18. Safari on iPhone (00:49:16)

19. Steve Jobs' "Thoughts on Flash" (00:50:45)

20. What have we learned? (01:01:34)

14 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 437839118 series 3587226
Content provided by Graham Bower and Charlie Sorrel, Graham Bower, and Charlie Sorrel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Graham Bower and Charlie Sorrel, Graham Bower, and Charlie Sorrel or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Safari is one of Apple’s most enduring and popular apps, with versions running on Mac, iPhone, iPad, and even Vision Pro. But it wasn’t always the behemoth we know today.

When it launched in 2003, Safari faced fierce competition from Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, a bruiser of a browser with over 95% market share. Safari didn’t seem to stand a chance. And yet, just twelve years later, Microsoft gave up the fight, scrapping Internet Explorer in favor of Edge, a new app based on code borrowed from Safari.

So, how did Safari deliver this knock-out blow? In this episode we go back to an era when Apple championed standards, interoperability, and open source. We’ll learn why Steve Jobs argued passionately against proprietary platforms. And we’ll discover how Apple handed its crown jewels over to a bitter rival.

This is a David versus Goliath story of a plucky little web browser that went on to conquer the world.

LINKS

Full video of MacWorld SF 2003, where Steve Jobs introduced the first Safari beta.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTF9wnTPpK0

Don Melton, former director of internet technologies at Apple, explains how Safari got it’s name.
https://donmelton.com/2012/12/19/when-i-first-heard-the-name-safari/

Clip of Apple Worldwide Developers Conference 2007, where Steve Jobs introduces Safari for Windows.
https://www.cnet.com/videos/steve-jobs-announces-safari-for-windows/

Webkit.org
https://webkit.org

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Safari - how Apple built the engine that powers almost every modern web browser (00:00:00)

2. Teaser questions (00:01:25)

3. What is WebKit? (00:03:37)

4. Outlining the three parts to this episode (00:05:22)

5. Setting the scene (00:06:15)

6. How Safari got its name (00:07:06)

7. 1991 Tim Berners Lee invents the Web (00:08:35)

8. 1993 NCSA Mosaic web browser (00:09:25)

9. 1994 Netscape Navigator introduces JavaScript (00:10:45)

10. 1995 Microsoft Internet Explorer (00:13:04)

11. 2000 Konqueror web browser (00:18:08)

12. Dave Hyatt, Camino, and Firefox (00:18:35)

13. Apple's deal with Microsoft (00:19:08)

14. MacWorld SF 2003 - Safari beta launch (00:20:54)

15. Open source and KHTML (00:30:05)

16. Safari for Windows (00:43:07)

17. Google uses WebKit for Chrome (00:46:35)

18. Safari on iPhone (00:49:16)

19. Steve Jobs' "Thoughts on Flash" (00:50:45)

20. What have we learned? (01:01:34)

14 episodes

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