I have just installed it and I am simply appalled because my CSS doesn't seem to work and all my text is invisible... Anyone else have a problem with this? Not that it's a problem, over 90% of my visitors still use some version of IE...
I was just about to post this, Adam! If you already have Quicktime installed on your PC, do not download the version of Safari with it. Just grab the 8MB installer (thanks go out to vgarcia on SitePoint for that tip).
Remember folks, this is a BETA. This is the perfect opportunity to find the bugs and get them in to Apple so they can make this the best product they can (it doesn't have to BE the best, but it does have to WORK). And remember what I've said since last November - dont' test in browsers; test in rendering engines. Have fun, enjoy, and keep your arms and legs inside the vehicle and nobody will get hurt.
Sorry for the threadjacking, but run a quick Google search for KDE 4.0 on Windows - looks like Konqueror may be climbing aboard the Windows bandwagon as well.
http://img504.imageshack.us/img504/7320/06112007212035fd0.png Works for me, however .. the CPU usage is almost as much as firefox and I have a few add-ons etc on firefox..
The version without quicktime. Windows XP Home Edition here. Are you sure you meet the minimum specification requirements?
Well, I'm not great at all this computer stuff.. I have 38,5 Gb free space on my C drive and I'm using Windows XP. I'm not sure about the processor, though. Is there a way to find that out? Thanks!
I saw that. I am completely leaving that out of things to test. Anyone who runs Safari on the PC is dumb, imho.
Katy, right-click on "My Computer" and it'll give you a rundown of what your processor and memory are. LeetPCUser - I've said it a thousand times, I'll say it again. It's a best practice to test against each of the four major rendering engines (Trident, Gecko, Presto, KHTML/WebKit) as you develop your site. Don't worry too much about the browser. If you test against IE and/or FF only, you're leaving out a HUGE portion of alternate browser users who won't even bother coming back to your site. Not only that, but testing in the four engines can make you a better coder (if you do it enough). Just food for thought.