The Safari Technology Preview update is available through the Software Update mechanism in the Mac App Store (or in System Preferences in Mojave) to anyone who has downloaded the browser. The new Safari Technology Preview update is available for both macOS High Sierra and macOS Mojave, the newest version of the Mac operating system that's currently being beta tested by developers and public beta testers. Safari Technology Preview release 65 includes bug fixes and feature improvements for the Storage Access API, Media, Apple Pay, Payment Request, Shadow DOM, Fetch API, Service Workers, Web API, Web Inspector, WebGL 2, Web Assembly, and Safari Extensions. Apple designed the Safari Technology Preview to test features that may be introduced into future release versions of Safari. You can also enable a global setting for each item listed by using the When visiting other websites menu at the bottom of the panel.Apple today released a new update for Safari Technology Preview, the experimental browser Apple first introduced over two years ago in March of 2016. Click on the new Websites tab in Preferences and you can view and edit the settings for each site on the list. You can review all of the site-by-site settings in Safari's Preferences. It's enabled by default globally and is the Intelligent Tracking Prevention feature that "reduces cross-site tracking by further limiting cookies and other website data." In other words, if you view a pair of shoes on a site, you'll see fewer ads for those shoes following you around on other sites.Īt the bottom of the Settings for This Website panel you can set permissions for sites accessing your computer's camera, microphone and location. You can also set a zoom level for a site if, for example, it features text that's too small to read without squinting.īelow the Reader setting is a check box for Enable content blockers. Head back to the Settings for This Website panel and you can check a box to Use Reader when available, which is great for sites with poor layouts that you'd much rather view without ads and other page elements cluttering the page. Then sit back and rejoice in the silence. Choose Auto-Play from the left panel and for When visiting other websites at the bottom of the window, select Never Auto-Play. Open Preferences and click on the new Websites tab. There is also a global setting for stopping autoplay videos. You'll see a line for Auto-Play, which you can allow or stop or prevent only videos with sound from playing. On this panel, you can adjust the settings for the current site you are visiting. With the preview installed, you can find Safari's new features in a single panel by right-clicking on a site's URL bar and clicking Settings for This Website. The preview app has the same compass icon as the real Safari but it's purple instead of blue.
It's meant for developers to test out the unfinished browser and report bugs, but you can easily install it and use it to take a tour of what will arrive this fall on your Mac when MacOS High Sierra is released. It's a standalone app that's separate from your current version of Safari. To try Safari 11, you need to install the Safari Technology Preview. You are also given controls to allow or prevent a site from accessing your computer's camera, microphone and location. Other upcoming Safari additions include setting a zoom level for a site and setting it to default to Reader view. You can also stop sites from tracking you, what Federighi called "intelligent tracking prevention" at WWDC. Headlining the next version of Safari is the ability to stop videos from automatically starting, giving you a little more peace and quiet when flitting about the Web. You can check out Safari 11.0 right now, ahead of its official release this fall when Apple takes the wraps off MacOS High Sierra. You don't need to be running the beta of MacOS High Sierra in order to get a sneak peek at the next version of Safari and the features Craig Federighi outlined for Apple's browser at WWDC 2017 earlier this month.