Safari 4 benchmarked: 42x faster than IE 7, 3.5x faster than Firefox 3

March 17th, 2009

By Nate Lanxon on 24 February 2009, 6:01pm

safari-vs-other-browsers1Proving itself a staggering 42 times faster at rendering JavaScript than IE 7, our benchmarks confirm Apple’s Safari 4 browser, released in beta today, is the fastest browser on the planet. In fact, it beat Google’s Chrome, Firefox 3, Opera 9.6 and even Mozilla’s developmental Minefield browser.

We used the SunSpider suite of JavaScript tests to determine which browser was the quickest, and the Safari 4 beat every browser in terms of speed, on both a PC running Windows XP SP2, and a Mac running OS X 10.5.6 with all updates applied.

Below are the actual figures if you want to see how all seven browsers scored against each other, but for quick reference we determined on a PC that Safari was a whopping 42 times faster than Internet Explorer 7, just over six times faster than Internet Explorer 8, 3.5 times faster than Firefox 3, and 1.2 times faster than Google Chrome. Here’s Safari versus the rest, excluding IE 7:


Add IE 7’s results to the PC graph and witness the shocking truth. These are results from a PC with a 2.1GHz Intel Core 2 Duo:

1) Safari 4 (Total time: 910ms)
2) Mozilla Minefield 3.2a1 (1,136ms)
3) Google Chrome (1,177ms)
4) Firefox 3 (3,250ms)
5) Opera 9.6 (4,076ms)
6) Internet Explorer 8 (5,839ms)
7) Internet Explorer 7 (39,026ms)


On Mac OS X, Safari was four times faster than Firefox 3 and a depressing (for Opera) 7.5 times faster than Opera 9.6.

Results (fastest at the top) on Mac OS X (2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo):

1) Safari 4 (Total time 967ms)
2) Minefield 3.2a1 (969ms)
3) Firefox 3 (3803ms)
4) Opera 9.6 (7322ms)


We’ll be bringing you a full hands-on report with the new features of Safari very soon, but you can download it yourself already here.

Update: Some commenters have suggested we should have tested Opera’s latest alpha release of Opera 10, as it features an improved rendering engine. We just benchmarked it and it scored 3706ms, putting it in fifth position on the PC, only marginally faster than Opera 9.6.

Apple’s Security Update Patches Mac OS X, Safari

February 13th, 2009

Open source software and an RSS flaw in Safari top the list of fixes, but the handling of at least one is prompting concern from a security expert.

February 13, 2009
By Sean Michael Kerner: More stories by this author:


apple_safariApple has come out with its first major security advisory update of 2009, with fixes to Mac OS X as well as the Safari Web browser. But at least one security expert said the company took too long to respond to problems that had been flagged in Safari.

On the OS X side, Security Update 2009-001 patches at least 22 different issues, spanning video, server and open source packages. Among the fixes is an Apple update for an error in the Pixlet video codec that could have potentially led to arbitrary code execution.

Though this is the first broad Apple security update of the year, in January, Apple patched its QuickTime media-playing software to version 7.6 for unrelated security issues.

Mac OS X also gets patched in the latest update for a number of different open source programs that it includes, with updates for the Perl and Python programming languages as well as an update to the Common Unix Printing System (CUPS) printing system.

Apple also updated the ClamAV open source antivirus application, which it includes on the Mac OS X Server platforms.

The company has paid more attention to antivirus software lately, although not all of the efforts may have gone as smoothly as it would have liked: Last year, the company posted a Web page advising its desktop users on whether they needed antivirus software for their desktop system. But shortly catching the eye of the media, it removed the page.

Apple also updated SMB (Server Message Block) (define), which is used by Macs to interoperate with Microsoft Windows filesystem. The upgrade aims to protect against a buffer overflow and a memory exhaustion issue, which could have led to a system shutdown or an arbitrary code execution, Apple said.


On the browser side, Apple is updating Safari for both Mac and Windows platforms for an RSS (define) feed issue. According to Apple’s advisory on the RSS issue, there were multiple input validation issues in Safari’s handling of “feed:” URLs.

“The issues allow execution of arbitrary JavaScript in the local security zone,” Apple said in its notes accompanying the update. “This update addresses the issues through improved handling of embedded JavaScript within feed.”

The general idea of using RSS as an attack vector is not a new one. In 2006, security engineer Robert Auger delivered a presentation at the Black Hat Las Vegas conference detailing how RSS exploitation could work.

In the case of the Safari RSS problem, Apple credits security researcher Brian Mastenbrook for reporting the issue.

Yet Mastenbrook’s not especially pleased with how the update played out. In a blog post, he said he originally reported the issue to Apple as early as July 11, 2008 — and criticized the company for its slowness to act.

“Many vulnerabilities rely on attack mechanisms which require a fair amount of technical sophistication on the part of the attacker,” Mastenbrook said in his post. “By contrast, this vulnerability works in exactly the same way on all affected platforms, and does not require intricate knowledge of the processor or operating system to exploit. I discovered it accidentally, which indicates that this issue could also be discovered by others.”

Mastenbrook goes on to allege that Apple users were unnecessarily left at risk for months and that the company’s handling of the matter could erode public confidence that Apple has robust security. Time and again, security researchers have alleged that one of the Mac’s best security features is the perception of its better security.

“If Apple’s products were widely perceived to be just as insecure as Microsoft’s, a significant amount of the goodwill the company has accumulated since the introduction of OS X would be erased,” Mastenbrook said.

Apple spokespeople did not return requests for comment by press time.   

Credit Due:

http://www.internetnews.com/security/article.php/3802841/Apples+Security+Update+Patches+Mac+OS+X+Safari.htm


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