Apple releases Safari 5 extensions for Mac/Windows. Can we have it for iPhone and iPad as well?
Apple's lov today announced an update for Safari 5 that enables extensions (plugins), something Mozilla's Firefox and Google's Chrome have had for a while now. We're happy for our big desktop brothers, of course. Really. Truly. But in our minds a lot of the stuff you'll read about after the break would be even better suited on mobile devices like iPhone and iPad. That's where convenient extensions like password managers would shine.
Maybe iOS 5?
Read on for the good bits from the presser.
[Apple PR]
“Safari 5 has been a big hit, and user response to the innovative new Safari Reader has been fantastic,” said Brian Croll, Apple’s vice president of OS X Product Marketing. “We’re thrilled to see so many leading developers creating great extensions and think our users are going to love being able to customize Safari.”
“Millions of our customers already use Amazon Wish Lists to store items they want to buy for themselves or receive as gifts,” said Gianna Puerini, vice president of Worldwide Design and Community at Amazon.com. “With Safari 5, we were able to quickly build the Add to Amazon Wish List extension that lets customers add items from any website to their Amazon Wish List with the click of a button.”
“We’re excited to continue working closely with Apple to bring visually compelling Bing experiences to Safari,” said Jeff Henshaw, general manager of Bing User Experience. “The Bing Extension for Safari brings Bing search intelligence to everyday browsing with Safari. When a user selects text in Safari, Bing instantly recognizes what they might need and pops up helpful, informative tips, from real time maps and driving directions to real time translations to direct web search results.”
“Using web standard technologies and Safari’s extension builder, we developed an MLB.com extension to give fans another way to consume up-to-the-moment baseball content, including live look-ins to games, right from the Safari toolbar,” said Noah Garden, executive vice president, Commerce and Sponsorship at MLB.com.
The Safari Extensions Gallery is accessible from the Safari menu or at extensions.apple.com. Users can download and install extensions from the gallery with a single click, and there’s no need to restart the browser. Extensions can be automatically updated and are easily managed within Safari. Users can enable or disable individual extensions, or turn off all extensions with one click.
Safari Extensions are built with HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript web standards, and can have all the power and functionality of advanced web applications. Every Safari Extension is signed with a digital certificate from Apple to prevent tampering and to verify that updates to the extension are from the original developer. Safari Extensions are sandboxed, so they can’t access information on a user’s system or communicate with websites aside from those specified by the developer. For increased stability, Safari Extensions run solely in the browser. “Our extension for Safari is a great way for readers to get all of the latest breaking news and all the important stories, blogs and columns they want to see,” said Denise Warren, general manager, NYTimes.com at The New York Times Company. “While you browse other sites in Safari, our extension checks for updates and slides in new headlines and thumbnails, so you won't miss a thing.”
“Creating our Twitter extension in Safari couldn't have been easier,” said Jason Goldman, vice president of Product at Twitter. “By providing features like the ability to tweet about a page and view trending topics, we've created a simple way to deliver relevant, interesting content to people regardless of where they are on the web.”
The Safari Extensions Gallery is accessible from the Safari menu or at extensions.apple.com. Users can download and install extensions from the gallery with a single click, and there’s no need to restart the browser. Extensions can be automatically updated and are easily managed within Safari. Users can enable or disable individual extensions, or turn off all extensions with one click.
Safari Extensions are built with HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript web standards, and can have all the power and functionality of advanced web applications. Every Safari Extension is signed with a digital certificate from Apple to prevent tampering and to verify that updates to the extension are from the original developer. Safari Extensions are sandboxed, so they can’t access information on a user’s system or communicate with websites aside from those specified by the developer. For increased stability, Safari Extensions run solely in the browser.




































There are 17 comments. Add yours.
Mobile Safari Extensions would be cool but would need some work. The iPhone at least doesn't have much toolbar real-estate.
Dream on (I agree, it would be nice though. AdBlockPlus please!)
But hey, at least Mobile Safari already comes with Flash Blocker built right in! What other extension do you need?
Extensions for Mobile Safari? If it happens, the only ones allowed will be moderated like the app store. I would wager that extensions not in the gallery will not be allowed...
A little too late for me.. I've got so used to Chrome that switching back to safari will be hard.
Yep, Safari for me is back in the dust. I use FF or Chrome.
I think they should get the reader feature on mobile Safari at least, kind of like an Instapaper feature. That would make reading newspapers and articles a lot easier.
@Boots
Yes, I use Chrome on my Mac exclusively, except for those sites that require another browser. (LIke tipb's contact form, which only works/worked on ffx-- what's up with that?)
@Kaled
I created this bookmarklet for my iphone. It sends you to instapaper's mobilized version of the current URL. Install it in desktop Safari and sync over, or create a new bookmark on your iphone, then copy-paste this into the URL field.
javascript:window.location.href='http://www.instapaper.com/m?u='+%20encodeURIComponent(window.location.href)
(In case the comment submission screws it up, there should be no spaces in the above, so you may need to remove a space if one is inserted, e.g. between the ? and the u.)
Enjoy! Bookmarklets cannot do everything a full extension can, but they can do quite a few things.
does this also fix the security flaw with the auto-fill? making it possible for access to name,address, email, etc.
yeah i wish we get it quickly. i saw it on http://www.maggadget.com/apple-safari-5-0-1-and-extensions-gallery-live-...
@ steve - Yes, Safari 5.0.1 fixes the auto-fill security risk. Not sure if the iOS version of Safari had the same auto-fill problem, but it seems like it didn't.
Just like iTunes Safari still hogging resources on my PC as expected. FF user I remain.
If this update fixes the problem of not launching on Leopard, I'll be forever thankful.
Well, it didn't. FUUUUU-
WAY excited about this! Yippee, way to go Apple!
I don't think Apple will make an extension for safari on iPhone, they just think that an extension have a lot possibilities of hole for hackers...
@sockroild thanks ;)