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For the first year to year-and-a-half of OS X's existence, one common complaint was the poor performance of available OS X browsers relative to other platforms. Most complaints were along the lines of poor rendering times and incompatibilities with some web sites, but the overarching theme was that despite having a modern OS for the first time in memory, Mac users were still second-class citizens when it came to surfing the web. There was OmniWeb 4.0 which had a beautiful rendering engine, but was slow, and Internet Explorer 5.1 which was rendered most pages accurately, but was slow. Soon, Mozilla joined the crowd. It was a large application with its own rendering engine, and it was . . . slow. Mac users had several slow web browsers to go with their slow OS.
Times have changed. Two-and-a-half years after the launch of OS X 10.0, Macs still ship with Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.2 installed and configured as the default browser. However, Mac users need not suffer with its shortcomings, as there are a plethora of web browsers for the discriminating surfer to choose from. Safari is fast becoming the most popular browser for the Macintosh, and it's overall usage share has nearly doubled since its introduction. According to the Ars Technica site log for June 2003, Safari users accounted for 7.4% of all visits to arstechnica.com compared to 8.7% for all other Mac web browsers. Of course, that other 8.7% could be any of 8 other browsers for OS X.
That's right. There are nine browsers to choose from. Which of the teeming multitude is the best? Ars rounded up the contenders, threw a few web pages at them, and took note of the results. In this browser smackdown, we wanted to look at three aspects of the browsing experience: user experience, compatibility, and speed. First, how is the interface? Does it fit well with the OS X GUI? Does it feel like a port? Does it follow common usage conventions (e.g., delete = return to previously viewed page)? Can I manage cookies easily?
Second, how compatible is the browser? Does it 'break the Internet?' Can it properly render complex sites? What about complex sites that follow standards pretty closely? How about the sites that are an absolute mess, or are coded assuming everyone in the world uses Internet Explorer 6? The ideal browser (if it exists) will be fully standards-compliant, but will still be able to accurately render as many sites as possible. The final criterion is self-explanatory: how fast are the browsers?
The applications reviewed can be grouped into 3 types based on their rendering engines: Gecko, WebCore, or proprietary. Gecko, of course, is the rendering engine developed for Mozilla.
Gecko is the revolutionary next-generation browser engine designed to support open Internet standards such as HTML 4.0, CSS 1/2, the W3C Document Object Model, XML 1.0, RDF, and JavaScript. Gecko also includes a set of complementary browser components that work alongside the layout engine to form the founding platform for the Mozilla browser and for products from commercial vendors such as Netscape 6, the AOL-Gateway browsing appliance, and others. Gecko is continuously under development at mozilla.org.
WebCore (and the corresponding JavaScriptCore) are used by two of the browsers under review: Safari and OmniWeb. From Apple's Developer page (which does not render properly in Safari):
WebCore is a framework for Mac OS X that takes the cross-platform KHTML library (part of the KDE project) and combines it with an adapter library specific to WebCore called KWQ that makes it work with Mac OS X technologies. KHTML is written in C++ and KWQ is written in Objective C++, but WebCore presents an Objective C programming interface. WebCore requires the JavaScriptCore framework. The current version of WebCore is based on the KHTML library from KDE 3.0.2.
The third group consists of browsers with their own rendering engines: iCab, Opera, and Internet Explorer. Let's meet our contestants. First, from the proprietary camp:
Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.2.3. IE has mirrored the up-and-down relationship between Microsoft and Apple. Internet Explorer 4.0 and 4.5 were horrible on the Mac, but not long after Microsoft and Apple signed their 5-year truce, Internet Explorer 5.0 shipped for the Mac, and it was quickly (and deservedly) recognized as the premier browser for the Macintosh. However, while IE for Windows has seen two major revisions (5.5 and 6.0), the Mac version has been limited to minor updates and security fixes. IE 5.1 was one of the first two browsers ported to OS X, and is still included in OS X installs. It is a Carbon port of the Classic Mac OS version. Microsoft has recently announced the end of IE development for the Mac (as well as a standalone application for Windows). MSIE 5.2.3 is a free application.
Opera Software's Opera 6.0.3. Version 6 shipped Fall of 2002. Opera was a late entrant to the Mac market, and there was some question as to whether they would pursue a version for OS X. 6.0.3 runs on any Mac running OS 8.6-OS X 10.2 and will run on Panther when it ships. It can also be embedded from both Carbon and Cocoa applications and offers a kiosk mode. Currently a version behind Windows, version 7 is slated for release by the end of the year. Just in case anyone doubts their commitment to the Mac platform, Mac users are greeted at their site with the headline 'Opera committed to the Mac.' Opera 6.0.3 is US$39.00 and includes a free upgrade to Opera 7.0 when it is released, although it can be run as free adware.
iCab 2.9.5 is an OS X port of the venerable Classic Mac browser. iCab was the first browser to compete with Internet Explorer and Netscape when the first preview release hit the market in 1998. At the time, it touted its small size and memory footprint as well as support for HTML standards as advantages over the Big 2, features that are not as important for most OS X users. It was also the first Mac browser to support ad blocking. After 5 years of development, it is still in the 'preview release' stage, and as such is still a free download. iCab Pro, when released, will go for US$29.00
WWE SmackDown Women's Championship | |||||||||||||||||||
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The SmackDown Women's Championship belt with default side plates | |||||||||||||||||||
Details | |||||||||||||||||||
Promotion | WWE | ||||||||||||||||||
Brand | SmackDown | ||||||||||||||||||
Date established | August 23, 2016 | ||||||||||||||||||
Current champion(s) | Bianca Belair | ||||||||||||||||||
Date won | April 10, 2021 | ||||||||||||||||||
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The WWE SmackDown Women's Championship is a women's professional wrestlingworld championship created and promoted by the AmericanpromotionWWE, defended on their SmackDownbrand division. It is one of the top singles championships for women among WWE's three main brands, along with the Raw Women's Championship on Raw and the NXT Women's Championship on NXT. The current champion is Bianca Belair, who is in her first reign.
The title was unveiled on the August 23, 2016, episode of SmackDown Live as the counterpart title to the then-WWE Women's Championship, which became exclusive to Raw as a result of the 2016 WWE Draft. That title was subsequently renamed after the crowning of the inaugural SmackDown Women's Champion Becky Lynch. In 2019, the NXT Women's Championship became the third main title for WWE's women's division. The SmackDown Women's Championship has main evented three WWE pay-per-view events: TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs in 2018 and, along with the Raw Women's Championship, WWE's flagship event WrestleMania in 2019 and Night 1 of WrestleMania 37. It was also the first women's championship to be defended in Saudi Arabia at Super ShowDown in 2020.
Following the reintroduction of the WWE brand split and subsequent draft on July 19, 2016, then-WWE Women's ChampionCharlotte was drafted to Raw, leaving SmackDown without a women's championship. Immediately following SummerSlam on the August 23, 2016, episode of SmackDown, SmackDown commissioner Shane McMahon and general manager Daniel Bryan unveiled the SmackDown Women's Championship (Raw's title was subsequently renamed).[1] A six-pack elimination challenge was then scheduled for Backlash on September 11, 2016, to determine the inaugural champion. The six women who competed at SummerSlam in the six-woman tag team match were chosen for the six-pack challenge: Alexa Bliss, Becky Lynch, Carmella, Naomi, Natalya, and Nikki Bella.[2] Lynch became the inaugural champion when she last eliminated Carmella.[3] The NXT Women's Championship would become WWE's third main women's title when the NXT brand, formerly the promotion's developmental territory, became WWE's third major brand in September 2019 when it was moved to the USA Network.[4]
The championship belt design is physically identical to the Raw Women's Championship with the only difference being that the background of the center plate and the default side plates' globes are blue (as opposed to red) to symbolize its exclusivity to SmackDown. In what has become a prominent feature of the majority of WWE's championship belts, the side plates can be customized with the champion's logo. During Naomi's second reign, strips of multi interchanging colored LED lights were placed around the outline of the WWE logo and the outline of the belt to go with her 'glow' gimmick.[5]
The title headlined a pay-per-view event for the first time at TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs in December 2018, where Becky Lynch defended it in a triple threatTables, Ladders, and Chairs match against Charlotte Flair and Asuka, which Asuka won; this was also the first women's TLC triple threat match.[6] The title was then on the line in a winner takes all triple threat match in the main event of WrestleMania 35 in April 2019, where Flair defended the title against Raw Women's Champion Ronda Rousey and Lynch, who won the match. This was the first women's match to main event a WrestleMania – WWE's flagship event.[7] At Super ShowDown in February 2020, the title became the first women's championship to be defended in Saudi Arabia, where Bayley retained the title over Naomi; this was only the second women's match contested in the country.[8]
Eliminated | Wrestler | Eliminated by | Method of elimination | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alexa Bliss | Naomi | Pinfall | 9:38 |
2 | Naomi | Natalya | Submission | 10:52 |
3 | Natalya | Nikki Bella | Pinfall | 12:50 |
4 | Nikki Bella | Carmella | Pinfall | 12:58 |
5 | Carmella | Becky Lynch | Submission | 14:40 |
Winner | Becky Lynch |
As of May 2, 2021, there have been 19 reigns between 10 champions and 1 vacancy. Charlotte Flair has the most reigns at five. Bayley's second reign is the longest singular reign at 380 days, while Flair's fourth reign is the shortest at 4 minutes and 55 seconds due to Bayley cashing in her Money in the Bank contract on Flair, who had just won the title from Becky Lynch. Bayley also has the longest combined reign at 520 days. Asuka is the oldest champion, having won the title at 37, while Alexa Bliss is the youngest when she first won it at 25.
Bianca Belair is the current champion, who is in her first reign. She defeated previous champion Sasha Banks in the main event of WrestleMania 37 Night 1 on April 10, 2021 in Tampa, Florida.