Private Browsing is here too, allowing you to surf the internet without your browser storing your search history or the websites you’ve visited, which is useful if you’re on a shared computer. You’ll still be able to download an ad blocker, but there won’t be as many to choose from. You can download extensions for Safari, but your options will be far more limited than they would be on Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge. This is a standard feature on most search engines, but we’re glad it’s here. The address bar where you enter your web page URL also doubles as a search engine interface too, meaning you don’t need to go to the Google homepage to search. We’re not sure why you would change anyway though, as Google is easily the best search engine. Safari uses Google as its default search engine, though you can change this in the settings though you’re bizarrely limited to only one of four options: Google, Bing, Yahoo and DuckDuckGo. (Image credit: Future) Apple Safari review: Features
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