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The world’s greatest web browser

It doesn’t exist. There are some hotshot contenders to the browser crown for sure, but not one of them has nailed it.

The big news yesterday was Apple announcing a beta of Safari 3 for both Mac and Windows. It even made page 2 of Metro which is a little bit weird.

Safari has long been the browser of choice for Mac Daddy’s everywhere and now it fancies it’s chances against the behemoth, the king of the hill, the undisputed champion of the world and the object of hate for any self-respecting web developer — Internet Explorer. Safari, you’re going to take a beating.

Microsoft’s ability to completely ignore the voice of the people combined with Firefox’s top-notch rendering ability, security (apart from the master password thing), wealth of extensions and the power of nerd, has led Firefox, over the past four years, to gradually nibble away at Internet Explorer’s user base to gain a respectable market share of 15%. Safari sits just below 5% while poor old Opera is struggling to make 1%[1]. I’m not sure where Navigator 9 fits in.

So how is Safari going to take that market share? What’s it offering over Internet Explorer or Firefox? It’s faster, apparently, not that 95% of it’s potential users would ever notice. The majority of PCs out there are so crammed full with AOL limited trials, Anti-Virus, Anti-Spam, Anti-Spyware, Google Desktop, Adobe Speed Launch, and all that other guff which gets pre-installed by manufacturers desperately trying to squeeze that little bit more profit out of each sale, that Mr. G. Higgins of Chesterfield has to endure 30 seconds of disk swapping before Windows will even let him double-click on the Safari icon, if he can find it on his desktop that is, which is chock-full of downloaded .EXEs, hilarious email attachments and misplaced documents.

And exhale.

What I’m trying to say is that Safari isn’t really offering anything else over Internet Explorer for PC users, except giving that tiny percentage who have a functional Dell but really like the look of that shiny Apple and might even consider buying one if they didn’t cost three times as much as a PC, a bit of Mac Love. It’s too little, too late.

Firefox really should have nailed it by now. It towers above the competition, the extensions are superb, even my online bank strongly recommends it, but

it

can be

really

s l o w.

And it doesn’t look like a Mac app on the Mac, which isn’t that important to me, but probably is to the majority of Mac users. And it doesn’t use the Keychain (https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=106400 - 5 ½ years old!). And it isn’t written by Apple.

Still, I keep using Firefox even though I don’t really want to, so when Camino 1.5 was announced this week I got a little too overexcited before being quickly disappointed. Camino is fast, it looks like a Mac app (it is a Mac app), it uses the Keychain, it imports my Safari or Firefox bookmarks and even duplicates Firefox’s bookmark keywords which is such a nice touch (are you listening Apple?), but despite having ‘Mozilla Power’ it doesn’t have Firefox extension support (and never will) which means I can’t use Firebug, del.icio.us, Google Notebook, Tails and all the other add-on goodness which I can with Firefox. Game over.

So you see, the perfect browser really doesn’t exist. It almost does, and every feature you could possibly want exists in one of the leading contenders, but not one of them has managed to combine them into the one true browser. The crown is there for the taking.

  • [1] Source: NetApplications

Posted by Olly on June 12, 2007 at 9:35 am in apple, browsers, news, safari3
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Introducing FreeAgent Central

£2444. That’s the current total Lylo has paid to accountants in our first two years of business. For this bargain price we’ve had three tax returns and eight VAT returns filled in for us, whilst we’ve been saddled with meticulously maintaining a gargantuan spreadsheet of categorised expenses and bank transactions. Not exactly great value for money… unless you’re our accountant.

So, to simplify managing a small business (and to make doing so cheaper), I hooked up with Ed, Roan and Dennis to produce FreeAgent Central, an online service targeting UK-based freelancers, consultants and contractors, and this week we’re proudly announcing the launch of the public beta version.

In a nutshell, FreeAgent offers client management, invoicing, time tracking, expenses, payroll and tax calculation for sole traders and limited companies, securely, from your favourite web browser.

There are lots of other great features, with dozens more in the pipeline, so check out the product tour for a more in-depth look. If it floats your boat, sign up for a free beta tester account and prepare to say goodbye to spreadsheet hell!

Posted by Olly on June 5, 2007 at 7:07 pm in freeagent, freeagentcentral, news
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Bunch of fives

Five albums, films and stage shows I saw, and loved, in 2006.

I’m spiralling towards middle age so I’m listing nothing hugely original here (see urban75.com’s Top 30 for the cool list), except perhaps the marvel that is Levi Weaver. He blew us away at the 12 Bar Club in the summer and his mini album is the most played thing on the pod this year.

Why isn’t there enough time to go to the cinema every week? It’s an outrage. I missed so many good films this year that even if I take a week off and devote it solely to movie watching, I couldn’t watch them all. At least the ones I did see were excellent (except Borat, which I can only describe as excrutiating brilliance).

Anyway, enough of your digitally enhanced films and new-fangled MySpace whatsits, Avenue Q has demonstrated that theatre is the new rock and roll…

Music

  • Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not
  • Levi Weaver - Civil War Between My Heart And Mind
  • Vikter Duplaix - Bold & Beautiful
  • The Whitlams - Little Cloud
  • Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly - The Chronicles Of A Bohemian Teenager

Film

  • Pan’s Labyrinth
  • An Inconvenient Truth
  • United 93
  • Volver
  • Walk The Line

Theatre

  • Avenue Q
  • The History Boys
  • The Life of Gallileo
  • Billy Elliot
  • Thérèse Raquin

Posted by Olly on December 28, 2006 at 10:43 pm in music, news, reviews
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100% just isn’t good enough I’m afraid

This week I’ve been putting my shiny new MacBook Pro through it’s paces by using the amazing Parallels Desktop for Mac.

I’ve never seem a computer so keen to impress me. Not only does it work perfectly, silently and look fantastic, it’s also SO fast that it’s able to defy the laws of physics:

Activity Monitor screenshot

Posted by Olly on December 6, 2006 at 9:12 pm in apple, news
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Get things done

Lists everywhere. Dog-eared scraps of paper, Post-Its, illegible scrawl on backs of receipts - we have an organised task planning system here at Lylo Towers. Thank goodness, then, that our friends over at AirBlade Software have just announced their first product - a Getting Things Done® application for both Mac and Windows called Vortex. Hurray! You can try it free for 30 days so get downloading now!

Posted by Olly on November 16, 2006 at 10:43 pm in news, software
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