Safari Rival Incognito available for Apple iPhone and iPod Touch
Incognito is the latest web browser that is now officially open for use on the Apple iPhone and iPod touch.
Incognito is the latest web browser that is now officially open for use on the Apple iPhone and iPod touch. The main attraction of this third-party application is that it offers completely anonymous Internet surfing. It’s perfect for those who don’t want to let others trace their web activities.
Incognito keeps everything in memory as far as a particular web session is maintained but forgets every thing the moment the session is ended. It never saves history, passwords, credit card information, information filled in forms and keywords used in search engines. Apart from this all your online multimedia activities are also erased. Nobody can find out the videos you watched, the songs you heard, the flash games you played or any other file accessed by you. Incognito provides full support to keep the linked media files anonymous. It also sports an orientation lock mode.
Incognito is easy to install and use. Its UI is great and there is a customisable home page that can be shaped as per your preferences. Not only security wise but the Incognito is known for its speedy performance too on both the Apple iPod touch and iPhone. It can load any web page (including the ones containing heavy flash work) at a blazing speed. You can find it at the App Store.
Incognito is the latest web browser that is now officially open for use on the Apple iPhone and iPod touch.
Safari 3.1 for windows is still in its infancy and was only released in middle of March, so we should not expect any major increases in usage yet.
It is almost a year since Apple introduced Safari 3.0 for Windows XP and Vista and things have improved further with the Safari 3.1 version. The initial glitches of Safari 3.0 mainly with plug-ins on high-content sites are now history, and Safari 3.1 for Windows is now in the reckoning in the raging browser war. […]
The Ventura County star offers the -maybe obvious - insight in an article about the Safari Browser for windows PCs: It is nice, but not a necessity.
However, even in this article, the reviewer can’t deny the new browesr’s speed and accuracy in showing websites.
Ted Choward over at tedchoward.com has put the Safari 3 beta through some tests with his online application, Thinwire.
He had it generate a grid with 1000 rows and could still use the browser while it was calculating the result.
Here are the numbers he came up with:
Internet Explorer 7: 1 minute 33.66 seconds
Opera 9: 27.93 seconds
Firefox […]