Some Mac users who have tried the three-day-old Safari 3.0 browser beta are hopping mad at Apple Inc. because several notable applications won't work after installing the application.
Numerous postings on Apple's user-to-user support forum recounted various misfortunes when they installed the Safari preview -- or tried to. Only hours after Safari 3.0's launch, a user identified as max said, "Just downloaded it, but while installing the installer crashed. [N]ow my old safari is gone and the installer app does no longer work!"
Others quickly jumped in. "Same problem here," said Senne. "Installer crashed, can't launch any Cocoa app. iTunes, Coda, Adium, etc...all fail to launch." Others jumped in to say that they'd had the same thing happen to them. Cocoa is Apple's object-oriented development platform....
A common characteristic was that the Safari installer had crashed part-way through the Safari installation, or the user had done a forced quit after the installer appeared to hang. In all cases, WebKit framework files were corrupted by the failed install. WebKit is the open-source application framework used by Safari, Apple's Mail e-mail client, the Adium instant messenger and other Web-centric software. Some users got their machines back in working order by extracting the necessary files from an earlier operating system update, while others sniffed out that the older files were intact, but had been moved on the drive.
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The fiasco soured many of the forum contributors on Safari 3.0, beta or not. "I don't know if I'm ever going to run Safari again," said Derry Dubuque after he'd had to rebuild his PowerMac G5's boot volume.
As users wondered whether Safari developers were getting the information they'd posted, at no time did anyone identifying themselves as an Apple representative or employee pipe up on the forum. Nor has Apple posted any documents to its support knowledge base that address this issue or any of the problems Mac users have reported with the beta. Apple did not reply to a request for comment.
Since Monday, users have posted nearly 1,500 messages to the forum dedicated to the Mac edition of Safari 3.0.
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