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Apple Businesses

Apple Terminates Safari Seed Program 414

coolmacdude writes "This morning Safari beta v67 was leaked to the Internet. Because this is the third time it has happened (v62 and v64 were leaked), Apple has apparantly had enough and decided to terminate the seed program that provided unreleased beta verisons to selected developers. In a email sent to all developers and posted on Mike Wendland's blog, Apple says: 'Due to Safari 67 postings to the internet, we have closed the Safari Seed project. We know that the majority of you are not responsible for the leaks to the internet, and we sincerely appreciate your feedback, time and effort with this project.'"
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Apple Terminates Safari Seed Program

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  • Damn Him! (Score:3, Funny)

    by disneyfan1313 ( 138976 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:51PM (#5576535)
    Apple Terminates Safari Seed Program


    Damn that Johnny Appleseed and his plan to propogate the Safari with Apple Trees... I knew it would never work!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:51PM (#5576536)
    More testers = more bugs found = better product.
    • by flagstone ( 464079 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:55PM (#5576558)
      Ummm....they did [apple.com]. There's a difference between beta and "nightly" releases (yeah, "seed" isn't really "nightly", but it's as close as Apple gets).
    • by siskbc ( 598067 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:58PM (#5576573) Homepage
      More testers = more bugs found = better product.

      Surprisingly, not everyone follows the open source mantra. There are legitimate reasons for not wanting to provide constant releases. One is confusion among a less educated (some might also say intelligent) user base - people getting what is effectively a beta and don't know it end up bitching at Apple. This makes them look incompetent, and can cause problems for their image.

      Apple has good reasons for wanting to keep their stuff under wraps until they ship. This doesn't make them wrong, unenlightened, or the enemy.

  • Too bad (Score:5, Informative)

    by Blaine Hilton ( 626259 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:53PM (#5576542) Homepage
    Thats too bad that a few had to ruin it for everyone else. Giving out software like that is a privage, not your God given right. People should respect Apple's wishes and wait until the full release, but no. Now its too late.
    • Re:Too bad (Score:3, Insightful)

      by g4dget ( 579145 )
      Giving out software like that is a privage, not your God given right.

      You make it sound as if Apple is doing people a favor by giving out unfinished software. What they are really doing is off-loading testing to unpaid outsiders.

      Now its too late.

      Good. So maybe they'll hire testers, pay them, and have them come in. No leaks.

      • Re:Too bad (Score:5, Insightful)

        by fgodfrey ( 116175 ) <fgodfrey@bigw.org> on Sunday March 23, 2003 @02:39AM (#5577332) Homepage
        Every time there's a /. article on "so and so released a beta of product X", someone comes along and makes this "Oh, they're just offloading testing" argument. The truth is, they have to have tested the thing in house beforehand, but users somehow manage to find bugs that your testers never do no matter how much testing is done. Releasing a beta gives the company a chance to get the product into the hands of people who a) Will "test" it in ways nobody at the company ever thought of and b) realize that there may be some problems.


        I'll bet if you did a "study" of version 1.0 of product with public betas and without, you'd find that the ones with public betas have fewer bugs.


        As to whether they are doing anyone any favors, I suspect that corporate IT departments like public betas because it gives them the chance to test the product before some bozo in management demands it be installed immediately the day it's released or the world will come to an end.

    • Re:Too bad (Score:5, Funny)

      by Alien Being ( 18488 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @02:24AM (#5577293)
      "a few had to ruin it for everyone else"

      Admit it. You were about to say "a few bad apples".
  • Who woulda thunk it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jbellis ( 142590 ) <jonathan@carnage ... m minus math_god> on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:53PM (#5576544) Homepage
    given apple's history of siccing lawyers on sites that dare to post pics of the latest & greatest before they're officially unveiled, the only surprising thing is that it lasted this long...
    • by Lewisham ( 239493 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:32PM (#5576696)
      Actually, Apple has a pretty good past record of "leaking" pre-release code. The Register has gotton pretty blaise about it all. You only know if something shouldn't have happenend if heads publically roll, like the time the mirror face PowerMac designs were released to eWeek.
    • by jmt9581 ( 554192 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @11:21PM (#5576816) Homepage
      I'm actually surprised that they didn't use steganography [jjtc.com] to uniquely identify each copy of the browser that they release to their individual, "select" developers. That way they could release the dogs of war on that poor soul.

      On another note, it's sad to see something like this ruined by what is probably a small number of bad seeds. :)
  • I'm Confused... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by terraformer ( 617565 ) <tpb@pervici.com> on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:54PM (#5576550) Journal
    Doesn't it make more sense for them to have as many testers as possible on pre-release builds? This way they find potential issues missed through the undoubtedly small QA team on the project.
    • Re:I'm Confused... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by disneyfan1313 ( 138976 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:58PM (#5576576)
      It does and that's why there are public betas. Once the software gets out there in the open apple becomes liable (not from a legal but from a public relations standpoint) from any damage or drama the software causes. Would you like your software to be labled instable or buggy simply because someone in corprate wanted more testers out there?
      • Re:I'm Confused... (Score:4, Interesting)

        by iabervon ( 1971 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:56PM (#5576761) Homepage Journal
        But why would Apple be liable (even from a PR standpoint) for problems with a beta leaked by somebody else? If it's being distributed by somebody else, the problems you have with it could just as easily come from the intermediary rather than Apple. It makes sense for them to limit who they actually give the software directly to, but they shouldn't care who ends up with what purports to be an unreleased version, whether or not it matches an intermediate Apple code base.
    • Re:I'm Confused... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bluGill ( 862 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @11:05PM (#5576778)

      No, someone must go through every bug report, and eliminate the ones that are for already known problems (with a public beta you potentially could end up with thousands of people thinking they are the first to find some problem that seems obscure). Then you have to eliminate the ones that aren't really problems (the copy and paste shortcuts are confusing by design since those who use them will use them often enough for the pain of memorizing strange key combinations is less than the pain of having to easy to remember short cuts that are harder to use on the keyboard). Next deal with the miscolanious problems (user didn't plug computer in, got a corupted download, has no net connection, and other problems that are either stupid user, or other stupid problem not related to the program).

      Really what it needed is a few QA testers who can test everything, but that isn't possiable. Not even Apple with control of all supported platforms can do it. A public beta might seem like a hope that the gain is less than the costs. In reality a public beta is generally a way for marketing to get a almost working version out before it is ready for release, and the bug reports that might come in are worth much less than the hype.

    • Re:I'm Confused... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ydlman ( 567392 ) <jolson AT northfield DOT org> on Saturday March 22, 2003 @11:49PM (#5576895)
      Another main reason that Apple may not want all these beta builds out is that they may contain features that may or may not make it into a 1.0 release. Perhaps they wanted to try out feature X (say tabs) and find that it doesn't work the way that they had planned and they don't want it in a 1.0 release. But now if they release 1.0 without a feature that has been in the seeds the public uproar will be incredible.
    • Re:I'm Confused... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by constantnormal ( 512494 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @03:13AM (#5577423)
      Contrast the way Apple has "managed" the Safari development with the way the mozorg folks have done with Camino and Mozilla.

      Apple releases a couple of "beta" releases, fires up interest and demand, and then nothing happens (from a public perspective) for a relatively long time. Given that it is beta software, there are a lot of things that need fixing -- the more people liked the initial rollout, the more demand there is for improved releases. But only frustration is available.

      OTOH, look at the Mozilla camp. There are milestone builds on a frequency on months wherein an attempt is made to level-set at a certain level of stability, and nightly builds that are expected to be fraught with bugs, but steadily progress towards the next milestone build. This method serves the people who want stability and predictability above all else, the bleeding edge lunatics who want the newest thing out, bugs and all, and the developers, who benefit from having the largest group of testers that is practical.

      How many people sent in bugs or suggestions for Safari? How many have seen even one of their personal hot buttons addressed? Virtually zilch, because Apple has been so stingy with new releases. OTOH, I personally have had several bugs looked at in Mozilla/Chimera(Camino), and feel a much stronger involvement with those products as a direct result of this.

      I think Apple is missing the point about Open Source software -- it's not just that it's cheap, it also has closer ties to the user community, and as a result, probably better fits the needs of that community. You can take Open Source, develop in behind closed doors with an army of people, and still release it as an open source product -- but it's the dumb way to do it. It's how Microsoft would do Open Source.
  • Poor marketing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by deadgoon42 ( 309575 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:55PM (#5576556) Journal
    I know that Apple probably has good reason not to make the various beta releases of Safari available to the public, but I think they are missing out on a good marketing opportunity here. These Safari releases are keeping everyone interested, or they're keeping me interested anyway. Plus, people can see the new features as they are implemented and maybe once a favorite feature is added, emails about getting that feature will reduce.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:55PM (#5576560)
    Who cares? It's just a browser that's going to be released for free in the future anyways. And it's based off of Free software at any rate.
  • Breach of ethics (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Theovon ( 109752 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:55PM (#5576561)
    I consider this to be a small ethical violation on the part of the individual who leaked the beta, at least compared to many other things. Nevertheless, Apple had placed their trust in a group of developers, and some jerk decided to violate that trust. However small of a violation that this may be, as compared to, say, murder, I would still like to see that individual publically flogged.
  • by The Ape With No Name ( 213531 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:57PM (#5576566) Homepage
    Why not just post the thing with a Talkback-like client and get feedback/bug reports from everybody? I know it is closed source but why not develop a Safari fan base by letting a community build around it. This is what Apple is best known for, right?
    • by tjohns ( 657821 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @11:00PM (#5576769) Homepage
      Actually, they already do. By default, Safari has a toolbar button that sends a bug report, along with an optional screenshot/code snapshot, to Apple. In fact, this is one of the reasons why they choose to release the beta, so they could iron out all the bugs without having to the test all of the pages out there.

      However, there is no need to get bug reports for a product that they know is unstable or incomplete (the post-v60 builds). If they posted one of those publicly, not only would they get a backlash for releasing an extreemly unstable build of their product, such as the first beta, which had a nice "feature" that would automatically delete ~/ for you, but all of their bug reports would be for a build which is still incomplete. Instead, they could just post their more complete, milestone builds, and get feedback which is much more beneficial to the developers.
  • Forget Safari seeds (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Znonymous Coward ( 615009 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @09:57PM (#5576572) Journal
    If you want to be on the bleeding edge use Camino nightly builds :)

    http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/camino/nightly/latest /
  • by ShatteredDream ( 636520 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:03PM (#5576599) Homepage
    How hard would it be for them to put in the developer builds a little code to pop up a splash screen everytime that safari loads that reminds the user that it is a developer, not end-user build unless they disable that in the preferences?
  • by gusnz ( 455113 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:04PM (#5576600) Homepage
    With the KHTML engine still undergoing internal tweaking for better DOM/CSS/etc support, I think Apple should look to the Mozilla project for their approach to browser development. Why not publicly release nightly betas, so users can post feedback on development as with BugZilla? Users don't expect the nightlies to be perfect, but it would keep the tweakers (and web designers like me) happy, and the developers would get a lot more feedback on their progress, whereas most casual users can happily download milestone releases.

    Otherwise, the standards compliance of the browser will possibly be delayed (all the esoteric little implementation issues, especially with CSS and DHTML). After all, many eyeballs results in better code, especially with something as complex as a web browser.
    • Can't (Score:5, Informative)

      by TheInternet ( 35082 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @12:53AM (#5577072) Homepage Journal
      Why not publicly release nightly betas, so users can post feedback on development as with BugZilla?

      Quality expectations are different for Apple than from many other developers. I suspect this is at least part of the reason. Not to mention all the journalists that would descend upon such a thing to pick apart every release.

      Users don't expect the nightlies to be perfect

      Normal users don't, Mac users do. They take it personally if there's a bug in a piece of software -- like Apple is after them specifically.

      - Scott
  • by psoriac ( 81188 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:05PM (#5576607)
    So one could literally say that a few bad seeds ruined it for everyone else...

  • by RedX ( 71326 ) <redx AT wideopenwest DOT com> on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:06PM (#5576611)
    Without getting into the neverending "tabbed browsing" argument, I'll go out on a limb and say that these leaked builds will probably help Safari's marketshare in the long run. In browsing various Mac messageboards before and after v60 was leaked, I can tell you that many people dumped Camino the moment that tabs were discovered in Safari's debug menu. Had Safari's tabs been kept under wraps until the next public beta, Camino would have only matured and captured more users, which in the long run could've decreased the number of users using Safari. Of course this is all speculation. And I won't even get into the benefit that Apple realized by having a larger user base testing these builds.
  • Uh-oh (Score:5, Funny)

    by tulare ( 244053 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:13PM (#5576633) Journal
    In the interest of full or false disclosure (you decide), I should let you all know that I'm not using v64, which I did not find at macrumors, and it does not have tabbed browsing, which I donot find to be the final feature which makes Safari not kick ass on the mac.

    Had I known that these were seeds that Apple didn't want released, I would of course have downloaded them and used them. I would, after all, want to spoil a good thing

    Move the nots around to make the above true.
  • It's out? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by krray ( 605395 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:20PM (#5576651)
    It's out? Thanks. Quick Google search. Got it. Love it.

    Should I notify Apple that when you leave the tabs on all the time and "Open in tabs" a docked bookmark that the first tab always looks "active" (though the windowing for the tabs works fine)?

    It's too bad Apple is taking this stance. They should understand, realize, and if they were smart: CAPITALIZE on that fact that there _is_ a reason why us lowly end users are clamoring for the latest builds of Safari.

    It works. Like most Apple software it works very well -- even at the beta level. Yes, this is too bad...
    • by bnenning ( 58349 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:28PM (#5576687)
      Should I notify Apple that when you leave the tabs on all the time and "Open in tabs" a docked bookmark that the first tab always looks "active" (though the windowing for the tabs works fine)?


      Sure. Dave Hyatt has been known to possibly fix hypothetical bugs [mozillazine.org] that may or may not occur in Safari versions that may or may not exist.

  • easter eggs (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:27PM (#5576681)

    They should have done that trick where each developer gets a slightly different copy, possibly each having a different easter egg embedded inside. All they then have to do is download the version from the internet and trigger the easter egg to find out which copy was leaked and cut that developer off.

    --
    Dreamweaver Templates [dynamicexpression.com]
  • by mariox19 ( 632969 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:35PM (#5576705)

    What's up with these developers? It's like they're desparately trying to be one of the "cool kids," leaking the code to the Internet. "Yippee!"

    So, in an attempt at trying to upgrade their status to being picked only second to last in gym class, all the legitimate developers who respect agreements they've made have to suffer.

    Nice going!

  • by miguel_at_menino.com ( 89271 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:44PM (#5576729)
    So, um, where can we download the latest version?

    Where was it leaked?
  • by Fritz Benwalla ( 539483 ) <randomregs&gmail,com> on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:51PM (#5576748)

    Lots of companies distribute mildly confidential materials to a controlled circulation - business plans, movie screeners, all kinds of stuff.

    It's common practice to encode these materials in subtle ways, like slightly change wording or graphics details in paper documents, and causing time stamps to appear at unique times in video screeners. Then when a screener ends up being sold on a card table in Times Square they can tell who leaked it. Wouldn't this be trivial to do in a software distribution like this? Especially if they feel strongly enough to get so huffy about it in their e-mail.

    It just seems odd to me that they would throw away something as potentially valuable as a build testers program when there are fairly simple ways to nab specific culprits and just cut them off instead.

    Their willingness just to drop it cold leads me to believe that they were looking for reasons to drop it anyway, and just decided to make a little hay to make a point.

    -----

  • Forced into it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ShadowMind ( 546734 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @10:56PM (#5576762)
    There is a big trade-off between getting a decent sized community to test a product and allowing a not-yet-debugged product out into the wild.

    As a developer is it very valuable to have a willing group of people willing to test and feedback on not-yet-ready-for-market products. Unfortunately if these releases then get a wider distribution to people who don't understand that the app us a work in progress (as has happened with safari), any problems (which would be solved before an official release) reflect badly on both the product and the developer.

    Given that the betas are being leaked, and Apple's reputation for quality of its products, I don't think they had any option but to cancel to program. I also welcome their move for other reasons:

    As a web developer, one of the major issues I face is not just making a site compatible with the major browser releases (which in itself is a problem), but also with all the betas that are still being used. Many beta releases (or should have been betas) have quite significant bugs which are *very* difficult to work around. For example, I still see hits from people using betas of Netscape 4.

    Once a pre-release product makes it into the wild, many of the initial users will continue it use it since 'it works for me'. Of course, if this browser doesn't work with a site due to bugs or incompatibilities in the browser, its the sites fault - from the users perspective - and my clients if the user complains. These almost-right products seem to persist almost forever.

  • by Henry V .009 ( 518000 ) on Saturday March 22, 2003 @11:16PM (#5576802) Journal
    1) They should have known that it would be available for download on the net as soon as they handed it out. If they didn't take that into account before starting the program they're idiots.

    2) A lot of people justify Apple here by posting the standard shit about it being terrible for the public to see an unfinished product. This is wrong and silly. Most people who come across this type of thing and are willing to install a beta are a) warez people who aren't gonna buy it anyway, or b) early adopters who are itching to try it out and are going to buy it no matter what.

    3) And finally some people are going to whine about the humanity of programmers having to see their beautiful program that they love like a child being stolen by the masses. Tell them to stop whining. The programmers are wage slaves. If the company earns more money because of massive warezing (that should be 'When the company inevitably earn more...') the programmers should shut up about the hurt to their souls and get back to fulfilling their contracts.

    Software companies act like this because they are run by idiots. You have no clue of the true magnitude of the crass stupidity they are capable of.

    And Apple just likes to throw temper tantrums. They probably lost more customers by canceling this program and making a stink than they would have lost by having betas escape into the wild.
    • by JohnG ( 93975 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @12:37AM (#5577023)
      "And Apple just likes to throw temper tantrums. They probably lost more customers by canceling this program and making a stink than they would have lost by having betas escape into the wild."

      Considering Safari is a free download I don't think they are complaining much about lost customers.

      • by hmccabe ( 465882 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @01:36AM (#5577167)
        Seriously dude, the average person on the street isn't like us. They talk about the war, and reality TV, and 401ks and the like. They don't care when a developer's beta release program gets cancelled. For God's sake, I just read this whole message board and I could care less.
      • I see that I need to explain how the world works. It's all about customers. Apple is a company. It therefore has to make this thing called money.

        The entire reason for developing Safari is to get more customers for Apple. Safari is 'free' but it also convinces people that they need a Mac.

        As I said in the original post, they've cancelled this program because they're worried about people seeing betas and then losing them as customers. I also pointed out why that reasoning is flawed.
    • by inkswamp ( 233692 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @05:28AM (#5577657)
      They probably lost more customers by canceling

      I swear to freakin' God, the geek crowd on the Internet has the most impenetrable tunnel-vision I've ever seen. How on earth could Apple lose customers by cancelling a beta testing program? Most customers know nothing of it, much less the "controversy" surrounding it being cancelled.

      Get out a little more often.

  • Watermarks? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by .com b4 .storm ( 581701 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @12:29AM (#5577006)
    Maybe instead of discontinuing this program, Apple should have quietly started watermarking the private builds of Safari. A different watermark for each developer they give a sneak peak too. Then when it's leaked, they'll know who did it.

    Of course, they may do this already, and just decide not to divulge that information... Just a thought anyway.
  • by itistoday ( 602304 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @12:41AM (#5577038) Homepage
    I tested v67 out and I think there was a reason Apple didn't want it out: Bugs. This thing has so many bugs... it freezes, you can't click/select anything sometimes (but you can still load pages), among other things...

    So perhaps they simply didn't want to give a bad impression out, and don't want to be berraged by a million emails all pointing bugs out that they are most definitely aware of.
  • by dameron ( 307970 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @01:13AM (#5577114)
    This the the equivalent of Jesus bitch smacking all the disciples 'cause Peter was a little to loud in his preaching. Hopefully one day Apple will realize fanatics who leak information about their products should be encouraged. After all, any press is good press, especially if you have a demonstrably inferior product.

    -dameron
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 23, 2003 @01:41AM (#5577180)
    many game developers take when using a seed program.

    All seeds are digitally signed in one or more ways, so that when the seed is found on the internet, the guilty party can be identified and removed from the program.

    Another case of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
  • by giaguara ( 632198 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @01:43AM (#5577185) Homepage Journal
    Not only the v62, 64 and 67 leaked out.
    I saw v65 too.
  • by giaguara ( 632198 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @01:48AM (#5577201) Homepage Journal
    There are many Safari users who use those v62-v67. Why? Because they believe the new versions will resolve some issues.

    Just give out the nightly builds like Chimera / Camino does. Those Safari users using the unreleased versions will enjoy the nightly builds and help fixing and finding the things that need still adjusting in Safari.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @02:39AM (#5577331)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Is Apple Stupid? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by xant ( 99438 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @03:14AM (#5577425) Homepage
    A little knowledge of human nature and a smattering of statistics should tell you that this was almost guaranteed to happen, no matter what precautions (statutory or technological) were set against it.

    Is Apple stupid for thinking this wouldn't happen, or did they plan on it?
  • by isj ( 453011 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @06:39AM (#5577764) Homepage

    I think it is quite interesting that people recommend that Apple should have embedded watmermarks, unique identifcation, steganography and other stuff in the beta download to identify who leaked the copy.

    Isn't this the same posters that normally oppose DRM? :-)

  • The problem with code leaks of betas from Apple is the fact that they are realeasing code with the Apple name on it. With the Apple name on the product means that should meet standards that apple wants to put on it product. So is unstable betas are released it could hurt the company because the unstable betas will seem like the product is not being improved from the stable betas. (which developers can understat that fact, some time to fix a problem you may have to break some code and refix it later). But unlike the *nix people. The Apple Comunity is a wider range of people and a lot of them understand what a beta is but if they keep getting newer betas and each newer beta has more bugs in it and not less. They will feel turned off from the product and when it is released they would probably not get it becuase they would be fed up with all the bugs in the beta version.
  • Nerr, duh? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DAQ42 ( 210845 ) on Sunday March 23, 2003 @12:17PM (#5578349)
    Okay, I think some of you need a little education on how Apple operates.
    First off, the whole beta program fro Safari is/was managed by a small team. Second, that team has a goal to release either the next public beta or the full 1.0 release by June 30th, 2003. You can verify this by opening up the terminal and navigating to /Applications/Safari.app/Content/MacOS/ and typing in the command 'strings Safari | grep June'. You will see two line in the binary that read "Safari Beta will expire on June 30, 2003.
    Safari Beta expired on June 30, 2003."
    This means that they are on a deadline and have a lot of work to do. A lot of people who have posted here are suggesting that they should do MORE work and add easter eggs/stenographics/blah-blah/security tracking to the seeded releases. Now you tell me, does that sound like a good way to reach a deadline? Especially one that is hard coded into the binary of the public beta? Now you could argue that putting in an arbitrary deadline is a "bad idea" or whatever, but I think it's a great way to keep a project both on track and managable. Pressure to perform and all that rot.
    The other thing a lot of people are apparently misguided in thinking is that Apple was naive about releasing these developer seeds. For this you have to understand a little bit about Apple's corporate culture and social philosophy. While you may not agree with it, I and a lot of others, think it's a great experiment and helps move our culture along. To understand thier philosophy, just look at Apple's public stance on music piracy. They have put in place some very basic and easily defeatable mechanisms with the iPod that prevents users from sharing music freely with thier iPod. They have not completely crippled your ability to share music, however they do put s little sticker on the iPod's that says "Don't steal music." They have also publicly stated in many debates about music piracy that it is a social problem, not a technological one, and that technology will not solve the issue. So in that statement, they have made reasonably clear that they don't really want to spend a lot of time working on something that they see as inevitable.
    They also want to trust those that they sign up for the seed programs. If you can't trust your testers to give you good reliable feedback, you are wasting your time and effort and you won't get your project completed or your bug fixed.
    Now the thing with the Safari seeds is that they gave the seed users 3 chances, basically 3 strikes, your out. After the 3rd strike, they pulled the program because they saw it as more detrimental that useful. I'm sure they started getting an unmanagable amount of negative feedback or duplicate bug reports, or even worse, useless ones because all these people that downloaded the seeds that were not part of the seed program probably started sending in incomplete bug reports or even worse, stupid things like "the thingy with the buttons, doesn't work on my puter, fix it now assholes", or something to that effect. This means that those managing the bug database and trying to glean useful information or even just track any real bugs now have to sift through thousands of shit reports. Needle in haystack time.
    Any of this sound reasonable.
    And finally, the most telling thing would be the reports on rumor sites. Apple hates rumor sites. They are counter productive to thier business (believe it or now, they are). If someone reads on a rumor site that such and such feature is missing/broken/doesn't work or whatever on a rumor site, and bases thier judgement on that rumor sites word (I know, stupid people, but it does happen, I have plenty of ad hom proof), they end up loosing a potential customer, or thier market image gets tarnished.
    I don't know about most of you, but these are the reasons that I see Apple's decision to pull the plug as both necessary and smart on Apple's part. Argue all you want about "the way it should be" or whatever, but these are the realities of this business. If you

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