I am not a gadget junkie.
I am not keen on the iPhone or Apple.
The layout on Engadget is barely readable; writing quality worse than mine and eh, it just sucks. Go on reading it for all the *hottest* news. Ehm, yeah.
As a person who spent a good part of last year developing browser-based code in JavaScript, XHTML and CSS, I am not a fan of Safari. It is not up to date with current standards and its behaviors are different than those of the more significant browsers, Internet Explorer and Firefox.
Releasing Safari to Windows users seems like a last ditch effort to defend the investment in a browser nobody needs anymore. Firefox works perfectly fine on a Mac; offering Safari to Windows users is an attempt to boost the user base that left Safari for browsers for ones that work. If more people use Safari, more websites will need to deal with it, making the lives of interface developers more difficult as it *does* need specialized code.
Comical to me is the fact that Safari touts its speed as its selling point.
Browser speed was a factor when you were using a 300Mhz computer, but on modern machines and current browsers and broadband, speed is so much less of a factor.
I am all about competition, but seems to me like Internet Explorer and Firefox keep each other busy enough. And on the Mac, well, Safari can stay there just for Apple’s world domination schemes.
In short, if you are a Windows user, please do nothing. You can use the hard drive space for like, paying Apple for iTunes songs.