OS X Yosemite: Get to know the new, slimmed-down Safari<article>
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<p>If there’s a single app that defines the OS X experience, it’s probably Safari. Not everyone uses it (many of my friends and family members prefer Chrome), but as the default browser it’s the window on the Web for most Mac users. It’s clear that Safari is the stock Apple app that has changed the most under OS X Yosemite.</p><h2>Where’s the rest of me?</h2>
<p>By default, Safari is sparsely decorated in Yosemite. There’s no longer a title bar with the name of webpages, and the “stoplight” window buttons have merged down into the toolbar
as they have in some other apps. All other toolbars are off by default, and the address/search bar no longer even displays a full URL, just the name of the host that’s serving the page you’re viewing. (If you want to see the name of the page you’re on, you need to show the Tab Bar—tabs are the only part of the Safari window that can display page names.)</p><p class="jumpTag"><a href="/article/2450066/hands-on-with-os-x-yosemite-safari-slims-down.html#jump">To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here[/url]</p></section></article>
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OS X Yosemite: Get to know the new, slimmed-down Safari