![]() Another mainstay of my browsing world, Greasekit, seems to have come through unscathed, and the InputManager which enables Leech (my current download manager) is working fine for me. A new release is available from the automatic upgrades in the main 1Password application, and new users who download the app won't have any problems with Safari 4. not that I'm running that many.Ī big deal for me was the fact that 1Password ceased to communicate with Safari after upgrading, but the developers were on top of that. It's quite possibly a conflict with another plugin. Unfortunately, my search-as-I-type functionality still isn't working, but the plugin loads and the additional functionality is there. I haven't seen an update to Inquisitor yet, but Glims came out with build 13 this morning. In the area of search plugins, I switched from Inquisitor to Glims a while ago because of the extra features Glims offers. The developers of our third-party goodies have our backs, in most cases, and I expect the ripples on the water to die down completely over the next week. Yes, plugins break when software is updated, when the software is beta, and when - due to the lack of a genuine plugin architecture - plugins are, in fact, hacks. Fortunately, for those of us who really depend on hacks plugins for surfing productivity, most developers have been preparing for the release using nightly builds and have already come through with updates. Just about every problem we've heard about at TUAW, and every issue I've had personally, has been an issue with a plugin. After waiting a day for the dust to settle - and for developers to catch up - since Apple's release of Safari 4 beta, it looks like there are relatively few show-stopping bugs to talk about. ![]()
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