Safari RSS: a Cop on my Computer
OK, full disclosure: I use Safari for almost all of my surfing, as well as my RSS.
It’s good, fast, and aesthetically pleasing - an important aspect of a discerning computer user’s experience.
Since the latest update (I’m using Safari 2.0 build 412.2), I’ve only run across one site that does not work properly with Safari. And I know that developers of that site are seriously clueless - a Javascript on the page requires IE funkiness to work. OK, I can handle that. Not Apple’s fault.
But there is something that is Apple’s fault. And I’m particularly ticked off about it because it’s a design decision that Apple must have made to brown-nose studio and music company execs: Safari won’t download movies or MP3 files anymore.
It used to be very simple … be on a page, see a movie or hear a sound you like, click File -> Save As, and you’ve got it. No more.
Well, this is a problem. Not because I can’t steal music and movies anymore - I never used it for that anyways. But I happen to blog for The Linguist, a language-learning start-up in Vancouver, Canada. And we put out a newsletter with I Make News. The newsletter is done by someone else, and the easiest way for me to get the files and submit them to our podcast directory (which is listed on iTunes, by the way) is to just suck them off the newsletter, upload them to our site, and that’s that.
Or, that should be that. Safari won’t let me suck the podcasts down. A File - Save as on an audio file results in a 4 Kb ‘audio’ file on my desktop. Double-clicking that file opens up iTunes, and precious little besides. Certainly not the podcast I’m hoping to capture.
Well, Firefox to the rescue. Firefox isn’t a cop on my own computer, wagging its finger at me every time I do something that it thinks is a problem. But I shouldn’t have to open up a new browser to do something fairly standard, fairly obvious.
This is disappointing.
But the biggest disappointment is that Apple is a company founded on enabling people to do cool stuff with technology. Disabling the existing functionality to save files is a step backward, and a rejection of that heritage.
4 Responses to “Safari RSS: a Cop on my Computer”
Comments are disabled as this is now an archive site. All new comments and new posts available on Sparkplug 9.

Welcome to my old site. I'm John Koetsier, and you're in the wrong place.I'd really, really like to welcome you to my new site at Sparkplug 9.
It has all the great stuff from this site, plus an updated look, and all my recent posts. Thanks!
subscribe
Recent Comments
best of bizhack
-
Stop the blog widget insanity
Small biz blogging
Start-up goals
Usability: the cost of getting it wrong
Blogs, splogs, & flogs: Edelman & the Wal-Mart fiasco
Humble pie
A-lister conspiracy theories
Why Apple sold PowerSchool
We are not "consumers"
The browser hijackers
iTunes education store coming soon
Google @ school
How to publish a course on iPod
PeopleAggregator has twouthmubble
Contracts to converse
Launching Apple's iFlicks
Outsider insight; insider outsight
Third cardinal sin of project management
Apple: set .Mac free
Business blogging
10 rules of great voicemails
My dinner with SCO chief Darl McBride
Blogs as songlines
Archives
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- June 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- October 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
- July 2005
- June 2005
- May 2005
- April 2005
- March 2005
- February 2005
- January 2005
- December 2004
- November 2004
- October 2004
- September 2004
- August 2004
- July 2004
- June 2004
- May 2004
- April 2004
trust
skype me
text link ads
- business card printing
- business school
- Affordable Toner Cartridges
- business christmas cards
- Staffing & Employment Leaders
- Performance Management
- Vector Marketing
- collectibles
- Briefcases




Not sure waht you mean when you say you cannot download music files. It works fine on the sermons on our church site at:
http://brookhavenchurch.com/sermons.html
Just click on the Download link with the option key down, even if you do not have Quicktime pro…
Just my .02¢
Bill
You’re right, and thanks for the tip. I’ve used it a lot for images, but have never (mental blind spot) done it for sound or movie files.
But now click on one of those files (to open it in your browser) and try Save As …
Why the different behavior?
I think what you mean is you have to pay for the PRO version of Quicktime to save the files. I went to the website you referred to and had no problem listening to the MP3 although you need QT PRO to save the file.
I’m right with you… I used to use that feature all the time!
-Ryan