Surfin’ Safari:
The Acid 3 test is far more complex than the Acid 2 test. It covers a wider range of standards and consists of many more individual tests. Browsers have to render a sequence of boxes that display dynamically in a stairstep pattern. For every cluster of tests passed successfully, the boxes will fill in with a color, which signifies that all of the tests covered by that block have passed.
If you run Acid 3 on the shipping versions of current browsers (Firefox 2, Safari 3, Opera 9, IE7), you’ll see that they all score quite low. For example Safari 3 scores a 39/100. This percentage score is a bit misleading however. The situation with all four browser engines really isn’t that bad.
You can think of the Acid 3 test as consisting of 100 individual test suites. In order for a browser engine to claim one of these precious 100 points, it has to pass a whole battery of tests around a specific standard. In other words it’s like the browser is being asked to take 100 separate exams and score an A+ on each test in order to get any credit at all.
The reality is that all of the browsers are doing much better than their scores would have you believe, since the engines are often passing a majority of the subtests and experiencing minor failures that cost them the point for that section.
Shipping Safari scores a 39/100 with some significant rendering errors. We’ve been working hard since the test surfaced and are pleased to report that we’ve entered the “A” range on the test with a score of 90/100.
My current default browser on OSX is Firefox 3b4. When the new Safari is released, I’m hoping I can jump ship over to it — or that it’s at least as good as the current Firefox 3 beta version. I have one issue that must be addressed, though, before I can even think about it.
[via DF]
6 responses so far ↓
Paul Walker // March 13, 2008 at 2:23 am
The latest webkit nightlies don’t have that issue; but they do litter your posts with span tags instead of using em & strong tags &c. I don’t know if that’s normal.
Jeff Ventura // March 13, 2008 at 9:47 am
Paul: that’s sloppy. I don’t believe Firefox does that.
teleolurian // March 13, 2008 at 5:48 pm
They’re doing some amazing stuff with webkit… which is good. Hopefully the Opera fanatics in my life won’t be so high and mighty about their standards support (Disclaimer: I like Opera too).
beanie // March 14, 2008 at 3:32 am
I read Apple hides special binary code that only Apple can use in webkit.
Hey, Jeff. Ubuntu Linux DVD is in top 10 on Amazon Operating System list. Currently #4 OS and #49 Software. I would say Ubuntu has succeeded at getting Linux accepted on the Desktop.
Jeff Ventura // March 14, 2008 at 8:24 am
beanie: it’s just a hobbyist/enthusiast/geek OS. Nobody mainstream is using it.
ase7 // April 2, 2008 at 6:27 pm
I think WordPress 2.5 [available at wordpress.org] has that issue solved.
But, as you said in a comment, you’re on WP.com, I think you still have to wait for a while for it to get wired in the network.
Best wishes.
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