Download icab browser for mac






















Softonic review Your taxi to the internet iCab is a worthy alternative browser for Mac loaded with features. It offers 10 features that make it special: Filtering advertising banners and much more The kiosk mode will cover the whole screen and all other applications are blocked iCab records all HTML errors of Web pages HTML pages can be stored in a compact ZIP-file, including all images of the page HTML pages can be downloaded automatically Link manager Source code manager No system extensions Open web page in new window or tabs Highly configurable.

Min Browser 1. Sunrise 2. Epic Browser Browser OmniWeb Camino 2. Your review for iCab. Your review for iCab Thank you for rating! What do you think about iCab? The latest version here at MacUpdate is 5. However, iCab 5. Dr-Sparks Jul 15 MacUpdate maintains two iCab pages.

Derision Apr 18 I love iCab. I've used it on my various machines, legacy and otherwise, for over a decade. It benefits from their being a stable version for practically every flavor of Mac: 2. I don't use it quite as much on my modern MacBook Pro, but when I do, I'm consistently impressed by its speed and stability, and always end up wondering why it doesn't get started more often.

Registration costs ten bucks, but the only restriction for unregistered users is an unobtrusive shareware reminder popup when you open the application. Even so, I like it enough to support it, and have had my license for years now. David1 Feb 15 Macmedix Dec 13 As of Dec , the most recent version is 5.

I will note that when running on Mac OSX Because on OSX Mixed bag. MacDefender Oct 11 For years my prefered browser and I tried a lot of those others including Chrome, Firefox or Brave.

This browser is both fast and useful. I recommend it over Chrome, Firefox or Opera. Scion Jul 18 There was an almost three year gap between releases. Security for browsers does not wait for incremental releases of less than a month or so.

I found that Safari made these crashes happen too often. This computer will not install Sierra. I am not looking to replace it, but to make it useable. I tried Chrome and Firefox and still had crashes happen too often.

Long story short, I started using iCab and the iMac seems to shutdown much less. Facebook in particular will redirect to a mobile page view that is quite hart to navigate and view compared to a normal browser view. Is there a way to make iCab work as a desktop browser? I want to know if iCab can be used, or if there is a browser like iCab for os x. It the fastest webkit browser available, and previous wrinkles have been well ironed.

When I upgraded my OS from Nothing but freezes and crashes, even while attempting to view even the most basic of web pages. However, it's finally been updated see below for the link.

At this point. And if it does have issues, I hope it takes less than a year to get them fixed. Mikael-B Jul 8 If iCab had anything on Firefox, like it once had, that it was faster, more compatible or more versatile I'd not hesitate to purchase it. But iCab has nothing, is slow, can't play back Flash video properly on Machines that otherwise play p without dropping a frame and HD Flash video in Firefox and Safari.

I've been checking out iCab since version 1. Even if iCab was free why would I use it? Gestalt Nov 10 Version 5. Point blank: I really like iCab. I really liked it in the OS9 days, and I think I like it even more now. It's fast, light on memory, and sports oodles of options and filter capabilities.

Yes, it costs although it works fully for free, just drops occasional reminders. But personally, I don't have any problem supporting software I like and use everyday. Not to mention, I paid two years and about six updates ago, and they've never asked me for another cent. So if you're finding Firefox bloated and Safari lacking, I strongly recommend a test drive. On a single page, is there a way to disable javascript source by source like NoScript or do I have to block them all?

Fast, powerful web browser. Zinneken Sep 12 Not often writing a review, but had to do it for this one! In my search for a browser that allows me to customise how it behaves for privacy, so how it handles cookies, javascript, blocks content, etc.

The only two browsers I found to have sufficient preferences to manage privacy as I want it are firefox with plenty of plugins and icab. The winner for me is icab hands down! Panthera Sep 3 You are joking, right? You'll be lucky to sell 5 copies. Fyreflye Sep 2 This was easily the best browser for OS9 in , and the developer hasn't raised the dollar price for it since.

But seriously, I adopted this browser as my default when it was first released and it was an amazing advance on Netscape and Explorer at the time, but it doesn't seem to have made much progress since.

Everyone should have the right to choose whatever browser they like, but other than its availability for early versions of OSX I can't see why anyone would choose it today. Anyone want to explain why? Mikael-B Jul 24 While Firefox and Chrome have a new release close to every month of the year, iCab haven't been updated since june 12 That's more than one year since the last update.

There are limitations for one man development. Think where iCab could have been had it been opensourced years ago. I buy apps every month, also much more expensive than iCab, but I have never bought iCab. I'd rather give money to open source projects than a "maybe in development" app.

I have to say this is one smooth browser. Check it out. Because it can handle sites better than Safari, and is fast and seems to have other functionality that Safari has lost, I have to give five stars -- even if it doesn't have full-on ad-blocking capability. Was trying this out, and found that I wasn't able to login to several sites, including MU, although I was able to login to at least one other site at which I am registered. Is this one of the features not necessarily working in "demo" mode?

Am honestly curious. It does seem to be a very fast browser and works on pages Safari and others have problems with; however, I can't see paying for a browser without an actual adblocking feature or plugin. Filter lists just don't cut it. I understand that the developing team is small and puts a lot of time into this project, and thus needs to be recompensed for their work, but with all the free browsers out there with adblocking, I just don't see this business model working.

RogerKatz Dec 1 Mikael-B Oct 31 Anyone that can tip on an adblocker filter that just works? Mikael-B Aug 3 Well, as far as the PowerPc version of iCab 5. The overall performance with many tabs is the deal breaker. Please note I have 8gb of RAM. This may be different on Intel, but on the PPC I feel the AuroraFox distribution of Firefox is way better and actually more stable even as it is beta software.

Why would I pay a fee for this kind of performance? Why is iCab always behind? I've been avaluating iCab since before version 1. However, the AuroraFox distribution beats iCab hands down. They are also in competition on Intel so you'd be well advised to evaluate both. Mikael-B Jul 26 Fix that! Notimetoulouse Jul 20 I have G5 dual processor Macs using Alex, the developer has always answered any queries within 24hrs of posting, and I gladly paid for this browser two years ago - the guy is trying to make a living after all.

Shame about making the newest version Intel only, that effectively locks me and potentially thousands of PPC users out of any future upgrades. Ho Hum. Way of the World. Iliketrash Jun 13 It treats log-in info as just another form that you have to fill in. To semi-automate this, you have to look up your passwords and usernames from whereever you wrote them down, or get into Keychain itself which few if any Mac users ever do, and enter the information into iCab manually.

You then have to go to the View menu how does that make sense and check Save Forms. NeXTLoop Jun 11 Version 5 like version 4 uses Safari's WebKit rendering engine. In spite of the share engine, however, iCab usually outperforms Safari.

I'm not sure if it's superior threading, but iCab doesn't get "bogged down" like Safari does. That performance doesn't come at the expense of features either.

Mikael-B Jun 8 Css3 test scores from css3test. Please post your results if you're using iCab on a later OS version. It's useful for people on different Macs to know what the limitations are if any.

The only thing that prevents me to use it as my primary browser is that 1Password doesn't support it anymore Funny thing is iCab had totally fanatic fans even when it sucked, say around version 3 or so. It sucked IMHO because it didn't support things fully back then. I felt the team was too small and too slow. This is better now? I'd assume support for things have moved up since, but I'm surprised to only see "supports html 4".

How is that a feature for a web browser in ? Surely iCab support html5 and css3 by now, no? Are there any speed comparisons for rendering and the javascript engine available somewhere? I'll probably try icab 5 as any previous major update of the browser, but I haven't continued to use it after the test page so far. I kinda like Firefox on Intel, but alternatives are good to have around. Sir-Sixty-Nine Nov 26 Superb browser! Fast and customizable. One thing annoys me though: if I have set some own CSS rules for a specific page and leave it press the homepage button or a bookmark , the elements and advertisements that I have disabled with the filter manager appear on the page for about a second before the new page comes to the screen.

Hope you can understand what I mean. Is this behaviour changeable? Anon-Bud Oct 17 ICab 5 has been out [in beta? It is fast. It is slick. The add ons are great [esp. Did I mention that it is fast? Key features Filtering advertising banners and much more iCab can block undesirable content, like ads and pop-up windows. Kiosk mode While in Kiosk mode, iCab will cover the whole screen and all other applications are blocked. Download manager Files and even whole web pages can be downloaded to access the content off-line at your convenience, without having to go online again.

Source code manager iCab can display the source code of a page itself or open it in an Text Editor. You can easily access all files which are used in the current page from a list, where the files are sorted by type images, HTML code, CSS code, JavaScript code, etc Windows and tabs At any time you can easily decide if a link or bookmark is opened in a new window or tab, in the background or foreground And more HTML pages can be stored in a compact ZIP-file, including all images of the page.

It is highly configurable.



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