Apple has just released an update for its experimental browser, known as Safari Technology Preview, which first came out in March 2016. The purpose of this browser is to let people try out new features that might be added to regular Safari in the future.
The latest version, Safari Technology Preview 213, brings several updates and fixes for different parts of the browser like CSS, editing tools, forms, HTML, JavaScript, media handling, networking, PDF viewing, rendering, storage, SVG images, tables, text, web animations, web APIs, extensions, the inspector tool, and WebRTC communication.
This update works on computers with macOS Sonoma or macOS Sequoia, which is the latest macOS version.
You can get this update through the Software Update in your System Preferences or System Settings if you’ve already downloaded the browser from Apple’s site. For more details on what’s new, check out the release notes on the Safari Technology Preview page.
Apple’s goal with this preview browser is to get feedback from both developers and everyday users to help improve the Safari browser. You can use this test version alongside the standard Safari without needing a developer account, making it accessible for anyone interested in trying out new web technologies.