All the buzz around Apple Safari Web Browser for Windows got the best of me, so I ventured on a "safari" to take this Beta release for a quick test drive.
The download was only 7.97 MB. I did not opt for any add-ons or plug-ins. The install went fairly fast.
Of course, my immediate curiosity was how our web site appeared in Safari for Windows. I had no immediate complaints. All the Flash and dynamic/interactive features appeared to work with no problems. There were just a couple layout and formatting issues I noticed.

The use of gel buttons on the page slider and web forms are a nice (and I guess expected) touch. The marketing emphasis on performance is not overblown. While I did not conduct any measurable tests, I did notice a difference in page load time compared to IE7 on several sites.

But things started to turn sour when I actually tried to use Safari for productivity tasks, like Google Premier Apps and Salesforce.com CRM.

The amount of memory consumed started to increase during my Salesforce session, even with only one tab open. IE7 seems to stabilize around 30MB for many of my routine web tasks. Safari quickly shot up to 90MB for similar tasks.
My productivity is very dependent on the ability to toggle between tabs using CTRL+TAB in IE. The equivalent in Safari CTRL+{ and CTRL+} was not only a stumbling block to learn, but didn't even work.
Bottom line? This *is* a beta release and I had beta expectations. But I was pleasantly surprised and will plan on making Safari a standard component of our web hosting and validation test framework. I may even make Safari my "daily driver" once the memory and tab toggling issues are resolved.