Web Browser of Choice
Here at Keyclicks Towers, most of us are PC users as opposed to Mac users. Itâs nothing personal: itâs just the way weâve been brought up. Notable exceptions to this ânormâ are our graphic designers such as Kathryn and Dimitri, who like most creative designers have being using Mac computers all their working lives (the design industry is traditionally a Mac stronghold).
Still, we donât think any less of them!
So, like most of the PC populated planet (which includes just about all of our clients), we tend to use the products of Microsoft which includes the ever popular web browser Internet Explorer. This ships as standard in some version or other with Windows XP and Vista: as of writing version 7 (IE7) is the available format with version 8 waiting in the wings in beta format.
Itâs worth pointing out at this stage of this article, that some of the Keyclicks team, remember when Microsoft were the ânew kids on the blockâ and IBM Lotus products such as Lotus AmiPro (word processing), Lotus 1-2-3 (spreadsheets), Lotus Freelance Graphics (presentations) and Lotus Approach (desktop database) dominated desktop business software back in â94 and â95 well before Microsoft Office took a grip.
Debbe even suggests that the current version of Microsoftâs Excel still doesnât have some of the useful features that Lotus 1-2-3, its spreadsheet equivalent; had back in the mid 90s. Still thatâs progress for you!
However, donât get the wrong idea. Just because Microsoft dominates our desktops as it does yours, weâre not blind to other alternatives (and neither should you be).
When it comes to web browsers, I think thereâs only one or two of us that has Internet Explorer 7 (IE7) set as the default web browser on their machines. The rest of us have Mozilla Firefox which started featuring stuff like tabbed browsing, changeable skins, RSS feed reading and third-party plug-ins, well before our friends at MS started to play catch-up with IE7 and from what weâve seen so far continue to do so with IE8, currently in its beta format.
For Mac users, the Safari browser has been the tool of choice for web browsing for many a year so it was only a matter of time before someone at Apple suggested releasing a PC version which is what theyâve just done.
So being open minded to alternatives, we thought weâd give it a go and download the now stable version of Safari for the PC for a spin around the park (previous versions were found to be full of âbugsâ and not worthy of comment).
First impressions are good. The interface is clean and simple, but isnât pretty and you canât customise its look and feel with âskinsâ as with Firefox, but hey; what it lacks in looks it makes up for in speed with page downloads much quicker than IE7. There are some nifty tools too with some good features built in as standard including the âtabbed browsingâ feature now familiar to IE7 and Firefox users, direct searches using Google from the browser address bar (although we couldnât find a way to change the default search engine, which was a bit of a shame).
New is a feature called âSnapBackâ which allows you to instantly jump back to where you started browsing from. âWhatâs the point of that?â we first thought, but once the concept becomes familiar itâs a very useful feature, especially if you end up getting lost in a large and poorly constructed site, some 50 levels down from where you started off.
So, if you spend a lot of time surfing the web or simply want two good alternatives to Internet Explorer, why not download the two web browsers mentioned in this article:
Both are free to download from the links above. If nothing else it keeps Microsoft on their toes with some healthy competition.
Tags: apple safari, ie7, ie8, internet explorer, mozilla firefox, web browsers