That means the only thing you need to do is hit the Recording button. It also appears as if the selected range also persists. The zoom level, however, will stick, so in theory you don't have to keep zooming out. I asked Apple's Safari evangelist ( Jonathan Davis) if there was some way to always show all items and he said not yet. I then selected from time zero to day 92000 or so, and frankly, if that isn't enough, then I don't know what is. I confirmed that scrolling down let me "zoom out" rather high: The project is open source one which means anyone can make use of the browser.
I wasn't sure how to zoom, but on the StackOverflow link I shared above, they mentioned that if you scroll up and down it will zoom. The makeshift Safari browser on the new Apple TV looks like a handy on-the-go tool to connect to the internet. Note the timestamps in the screen shot above. For me, my timeline was zoomed in such that every inch or so of screen space was about one tenth of a second. Ok - but once you know that you may run into another problem. What you will discover is that the Network panel will only show items within a selected timeframe! So that makes sense I suppose, but I wish that by default you could select nothing and have everything show up. If you find the timeline moving too quick, just hit stop recording. What isn't obvious (well to me anyway) is that you can click and drag to select a portion of the time line. Safari Since its the default browser, any links you open - from an e-mail or a text message, for example - will launch in Safari.
Being that this is Apple they probably don't call it a thingy. Download Safari for Mac - Free - 12.1.1 Safari for Mac 12.1.
See that section I highlighted above? Look on the far right and see a darker gray "thingy" you can grab on top. Turns out, the issue is due to timeline UI: I would click things in my app that I knew were firing XHR calls and nothing would show up in the detail. Ok, so what exactly is the issue? I noticed recently that when I go to my debug tools, select Timelines, click Network Requests and record, nothing seemed to show up in the detail panel, specifically: Safari Browser for Windows is a web browser developed by Apple and designed to bring you a beautiful browsing experience. The program lies within Internet & Network Tools, more precisely Browsers.
This free application is developed for Mac OS X 10.10.0 or later. We cannot confirm if there is a free download of this app available. I'm just writing this up and sharing pretty pictures. Safari 15.4 for Mac could be downloaded from the developers website when we last checked. To be clear, when I say I figured it out, I mean I found the right post on StackOverflow and all credit goes to user enyo. I finally figured out the issue and I thought I'd share. Sometime recently (I believe), the UI changed a bit in terms of the Network request panel and I couldn't see my requests anymore. I'm not a heavy Safari user, but I use the heck out of the web tools when testing PhoneGap/Cordova apps.