Using an adblocker seems reasonable at occassions. Some webmasters have chosen to turn their sites into an unusable mess.
Safari users should be able to exert as much control over their browsing experience as users of other modern browsers and then apply some good judgment about the sites they allow into their whitelist.
With the release of Safari 5 there are now official extensions and AdBlock for Safari was one of the first. Wouldn't you rather support the sites you use and appreciate? Ads are the only reason all of this is free and the reason web developers, writers and content creators have food on the table.
If you are the developer of an app, you can take control by using the claim
function on the right hand side of the app view. This requires you to be
logged in.
4 Opinions
Using an adblocker seems reasonable at occassions. Some webmasters have chosen to turn their sites into an unusable mess.
Safari users should be able to exert as much control over their browsing experience as users of other modern browsers and then apply some good judgment about the sites they allow into their whitelist.
With the release of Safari 5 there are now official extensions and AdBlock for Safari was one of the first. Wouldn't you rather support the sites you use and appreciate? Ads are the only reason all of this is free and the reason web developers, writers and content creators have food on the table.
http://safariadblock.com/
Would be nice to have full screen mode in Safari.
(Google Chrome got it recently.)
Does anybody know an adblocker/flashblocker for Safari?
I've seen the css based adsubstract, but it doesn't seem that easy to use.