Naturally there are cons, although so far I have only found that it takes up much more memory than the normal version, which is logical since it is a debug version.
And by the way, it allows you to use exactly the same iCloud content as the stock version, which helps a lot in testing.
Likewise, after performing some client code performance tests, it is managing to execute code in better conditions than the standard version, so there is hope that the next version of Safari will have far fewer problems than the current ones when viewing a lot of content. In fact, to do a test that I knew might or might not work, I went to a page that I’ve never been able to see properly with the stock Safari, and sure enough, I started seeing it correctly (namely, lazy loading of images, which did not work properly in Safari but did in other browsers). Both the rendering of the HTML and the execution of JavaScriptbased on a new engine B3 which compiles the code more agilely, they seem to render faster and with fewer errors.
To begin with, the environment runs quite fast both in terms of the application itself and displaying the content. In SamaGame we have tried it and these are some initial conclusions. Safari Safari Technology Preview available for downloadĪpple has begun to distribute, for the first time outside of the OS X test environment, a developer version of its famous Safari browser, which is installed on all of the brand’s operating systems (unfortunately the Windows version disappeared years ago), to that those who are subscribed to some development program of the company can test it and verify its behavior.