Un vistazo a Safari 6.1 Seed 7 para Mountain Lion

maxim

@maxim_apps
A principios de semana Apple envió a los desarrolladores varias versiones de software, OS X Mavericks beta 7, OS X server y Safari 6.1 Seed 7 para Mountain Lion.


Desde el martes la estoy probando y me parece bastante estable y rápida por eso quería compartir con vosotros. El español esta bien traducido aunque algunas pantallas se salen las frases pero eso es lo de menos.

Safari 6.1 para Mountain Lion o el Safari 7 para OS X Mavericks (es el mismo) tiene como novedad notificaciones push, mejor compatibilidad con CSS3 y javascript. Como os digo, se ve pulida.

Me gusta bastante como se ven los favoritos ahora, igual que en IE al desplegar para tenerlo más a la vista. Podéis instalarlo y si queréis tiene su propio desinstalador para la versión final.

Ahh, los que tengáis MacBook con Pantalla Retina vais a flipar.

Como novedad visible en seguridad, ahora hay otro opción más para no precargar el mejor resultado. Desde Apple Developer Center estas son las notas de la versión.


No es ningún secreto que Apple y Adobe no se llevan bien. Desde hace 7 años, para ser más exactos desde que iPhone original era incompatible con Flash Player.

Como Apple no ha podido evitar Java, ni tampoco Flash Player, busca un punto intermedio, el economizador de plugins. Una forma elegante de decirte que no veas pelis o te quedas sin batería en el MacBook

Aunque es solo una opinión personal, ¿mejor que fuera instalado baterías con 2000mAH extras no?






[SPOLIER]
Safari 6.1 and WebKit Release Notes
Safari 6.1 for Mountain Lion requires OS X 10.8.4. Safari 6.1 for Lion requires Security Update 2013-002.
Focus Areas Extensions Please test your extensions for compatibility with Safari 6.1.

Safari
Safari Sidebar The Safari Sidebar makes it easy to access your Bookmarks, Reading List, and Shared Links. (Shared Links on Mountain Lion only)
Shared Links (Mountain Lion only) Shared Links shows you links from people you follow on Twitter. You can see who shared the link, as well as the comments they posted about it.
Continuous Reading (Mountain Lion only) Continuously scroll through all the articles and webpages in your Reading List and in Shared Links. When you select an item and scroll to its last page, the next item in your list automatically appears below it.
Easy Retweet (Mountain Lion only) A Retweet button in Shared Links makes it easy to retweet links from people you follow on Twitter.
Redesigned Top Sites Top Sites has a new look and makes it easier than ever to get to your favorite websites. Rearrange sites by dragging and dropping thumbnails.
Safari Power Saver Safari conserves energy by playing only the plug-in content that’s front and center on the webpages you browse to. Safari displays a preview of the plug-in content on a webpage’s margins, but waits until you click that content before running it, so you only use energy viewing the content you want to see.
Third-party data blocking Safari blocks third-party websites from leaving data that could be used to track you online.
Faster Javascript Thanks to the faster Nitro JavaScript engine in Safari, browsing is even faster and more responsive.
iCloud Tabs autocomplete (Mountain Lion only) When you type into the Smart Search Field, Safari shows you webpages in your iCloud Tabs, making it even easier to pick up your browsing right where you left off on another device.
Yandex search built-in Leading Russian search provider Yandex is a built-in option for Russian users, in addition to Google, Yahoo! and Bing.
Sandboxed plug-ins Safari sandboxes popular plug-ins, making it safer to run them by restricting what they can do and what data they can access on your system. The Adobe Flash Player, Silverlight, QuickTime and Oracle Java plug-ins are sandboxed in Safari.
PDF sandboxing Loading PDFs in Safari’s built-in PDF viewer is safer thanks to sandboxing. Sandboxing restricts what a file can do or access on your system, so if PDF file you view on the web contains malicious code, Safari can prevent it from harming your computer.

WebKit
Better text and layout
CSS Regions and Exclusions Safari supports complex, magazine-like layouts for webpages. CSS Regions allow content in complex layouts to flow within different regions and still be associated. With CSS Exclusions, inline text and other content can flow around regions on a webpage.
Sticky positioning With sticky positioning, elements can remain fixed within the Safari window even as the user scrolls.
Widow and orphan support With widow and orphan support, you can specify page breaks and avoid awkward pagination in webpage text.
Kerning and Ligatures Text in webpages automatically benefits from support for kerning and ligatures in Safari.
Sideways text orientation With Safari support for text-orientation: sideways, Safari supports vertical text layouts that have horizontal text within them, helpful for webpages in East Asian languages.
CSS quotation marks CSS quotation marks are now language sensitive, allowing your webpages to display the right quotation marks for your language character set.
Accessibility improvements Captions for video WebKit now supports out-of-band captioning on Mountain Lion and Lion. In-band subtitles are now supported on Mountain Lion.
Web Speech API Support for the Web Speech API, Safari can convert text to speech and vice versa, allowing developers to create accessible, voice-driven web apps. 

Other new features
High DPI for image-set Support for high-DPI with the image-set function makes it easier to specify when to use higher-resolution images for displays with high pixel density.
HTTP strict transport security Your website can now specify that only https should be used to connect.
Page visibility events Safari now supports the page visibility API.

Web Inspector
New look — Web Inspector has a new look with a streamlined toolbar.
Activity Viewer — The new Activity Viewer in the center of the toolbar gives you information about your webpage resources, loading time, logs, errors, and warnings at a glance.
Dock to right — You can now dock the Web Inspector in the right of Safari window, making it easy to view mobile-sized webpages.
New Styles sidebar — The new Styles sidebar simplifies CSS editing. The sidebar highlights syntax, autocompletes, and makes it easy to toggle properties on and off.
New Layers sidebar — The new Layers sidebar makes it simple to see how composited DOM elements impact your webpage’s memory usage and performance. Clicking a layer reveals a popover with more details.
Pretty code — Web Inspector automatically pretty prints minified JavaScript and CSS, with support for debugging while pretty printed.
Source Maps — Support for source maps lets you read and debug your code even after it has been combined and minified.
DOM tree — You can now undo or redo changes to the DOM and view shadow DOM elements alongside regular elements.
Pseudo-states — Toggle pseudo-states for your elements to easily test and tweak your hover, active, and focus style rules.
Console log — Web Inspector has improved copy and selection behavior, live search, and live filtering.
Timeline filtering — You can filter timeline events to more quickly analyze timeline data. Web Inspector now shows exactly which lines of code triggered layout and style recalculation.
Debugging improvements — Conditional breakpoints give you more control over when to pause in the debugger. When paused, you can now hover variables to see their values in an interactive popover.[/SPOLIER]
 
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