Skip to main content

Trust me, the favicons in MacOS Mojave will make you like Safari better

posted onJune 5, 2018
by l33tdawg

Apple has a slew of new features coming with MacOS 10.14 Mojave -- a dark mode, stacks to organize files, the terrific screenshot tool already iOS, a gallery view in Finder, and even the ability to run iOS apps on your Mac. Fine, great, whatever.

For me, it was this six-word utterance from Craig Federighi, Apple's senior vice president of software engineering, that got my heart racing Monday at Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference: "Safari tabs can now have favicons." It was almost a throwaway line, with Apple mostly burying the feature in the fine print that detailed assorted changes too small to dwell on during a major keynote speech.

If you're like almost every ordinary person I've spoken to, you have no idea what a favicon is. But you actually probably do know what it is, because all browsers except Safari show them. They're the little website icons that show up on each tab -- a little red ball for CNET, the trademark gothic-script T for The New York Times, a blue bird for Twitter, a gray Apple logo for Apple. Microsoft invented them back in 1999 with Internet Explorer 5, and they've spread to every other browser for good reason.

Source

Tags

Apple

You May Also Like

Recent News

Tuesday, July 9th

Wednesday, July 3rd

Friday, June 28th

Thursday, June 27th

Thursday, June 13th

Wednesday, June 12th

Tuesday, June 11th

Friday, June 7th

Thursday, June 6th

Wednesday, June 5th