Safari (web browser)
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Dependable web browser built into macOS. (I canât speak to the iOS version since I donât use an iPhone or iPad.) Not much in the way of bells and whistles, but it does offer the usual bookmarks, autofill, reading mode, private windows, etc. And itâll install PWAs on a desktop (until the App Store side of the company convinces them not to again).
Safari is built in-house by Apple, and Apple is the main contributor to WebKit, so it integrates extremely well with the macOS desktop.
Apple talks a lot about privacy, but aside from blocking (some) trackers and offering the suspiciously-named âprivate click measurementâ, itâs not clear how far that privacy really goes.
Compatibility note: WebKit and Blink have diverged a bit over the years, but âI only test in Chromeâ sites are more likely to break in Gecko browsers in my experience.
Extensions and Syncing
It doesnât support extensions built for Firefox or Chromium. It does have its own set of extensions available through the App Store (at least on macOS), where I was able to find extensions for Pocket, Wallabag, BitWarden, Consent-O-Matic and so on.
Notably missing: Floccus bookmarks sync, KeePassXC, and Privacy Badger, though Floccus does have an iOS app.
BitWardenâs extension works just like it does in other browsers. As for KeePassXC, Safari does work with the password managerâs auto-type feature, at least!
Sync seems to be primarily bookmarks and the reading list, and only over iCloud.
Bottom Line
You could do a lot worse than Safari, but [Orion] has more features (and can use most Chrome/Firefox extensions too) if you want to stick with similar tech under the hood.