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macOS & Safari

I have a 2013 MacBook Air. I just updated to Big Sur 11.7.3 and Safari 16.3. I can't update to Monterey because my older MacBook is incompatible. Safari isn't displaying Start Page Bookmark icons image or letters and in some cases, not even the bare icon. Still loads the titles and the mouse click does load the website. Also sometimes when I boot Safari it starts with the first Bookmark in the array instead of the StartPage.

MacBook Air 11″, macOS 11.7

Posted on Jan 26, 2023 11:44 PM

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Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Jan 29, 2023 2:55 PM

Hi there, youngwoody,


We look forward to hearing if the suggestions to help with Safari help.


To combat Safari opening when logging in, have you tried the actions provided in article, Remove login items to resolve startup problems on your Mac? The steps here will walk you through how to review login items in Settings and how to remove them. We've gone ahead and listed the actions for you to checkout, whenever you're ready. You can skip over #2 since you're wanting to remove Safari from the list (if it's there).


1. On your Mac, choose Apple menu  > System Settings, click General  in the sidebar, then click Login Items on the right. (You may need to scroll down.)

2. Make a list of the login items in the Open at Login list—you’ll need to remember them later.

3. Select all of the login items, then click the Remove button .

4. Choose Apple menu  > Restart.

5. If this solves the problem, open Login Items settings again, add the login items one at a time, and restart your Mac after adding each one.

When the problem occurs again, follow the steps above to remove only the last login item you added.


Best regards.

Similar questions

3 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Jan 29, 2023 2:55 PM in response to youngwoody

Hi there, youngwoody,


We look forward to hearing if the suggestions to help with Safari help.


To combat Safari opening when logging in, have you tried the actions provided in article, Remove login items to resolve startup problems on your Mac? The steps here will walk you through how to review login items in Settings and how to remove them. We've gone ahead and listed the actions for you to checkout, whenever you're ready. You can skip over #2 since you're wanting to remove Safari from the list (if it's there).


1. On your Mac, choose Apple menu  > System Settings, click General  in the sidebar, then click Login Items on the right. (You may need to scroll down.)

2. Make a list of the login items in the Open at Login list—you’ll need to remember them later.

3. Select all of the login items, then click the Remove button .

4. Choose Apple menu  > Restart.

5. If this solves the problem, open Login Items settings again, add the login items one at a time, and restart your Mac after adding each one.

When the problem occurs again, follow the steps above to remove only the last login item you added.


Best regards.

Jan 29, 2023 1:02 PM in response to youngwoody

Hi youngwoody,


Welcome to Apple Support Communities. We understand that you're having an issue with your Bookmarks on your MacBook Air. We'd like to help.


There are a couple steps you can do to try to isolate and resolve this issue. Since Safari isn't working as expected, you can start with these:


If Safari on Mac doesn't open a webpage or isn’t working as expected


"If Safari isn't working as you expect, one of these solutions might help.


These solutions are for issues that affect Safari on Mac, including issues such as these:

  • A webpage is blank, doesn't show all of its content, or doesn't work as expected
  • You can't sign in to a webpage, despite using the correct sign-in information
  • A webpage asks you to remove or reset cookies
  • Safari slows down or stops responding


Reload the page

To reload a page, choose View > Reload Page, or press Command-R. If you can't reload, make sure that you're connected to the internet.


If you still can't reload:


  1. Press Command-Q to quit Safari. If Safari doesn't quit, press Option-Command-Esc to force Safari to quit.
  2. Open Safari again and try to load the page. When Safari opens, if it automatically opens pages that you don't want to open, quit Safari again, then press and hold the Shift key while opening Safari. 


Check Safari extensions

If you installed any Safari extensions, make sure that they are up to date.


You can also try turning extensions off. From the menu bar in Safari, choose Safari > Settings (or Preferences). Click Extensions, then deselect the checkbox for each extension to turn it off. Learn more about Safari extensions


Check Safari settings

The webpage might not be compatible with one or more browser settings, which you can turn on or off as needed. From the menu bar in Safari, choose Safari > Settings (or Preferences). Then click Websites, Privacy, or Security to access these settings:


Test with a private window

A website can store cookies, caches, and other data on your Mac, and issues with that data can affect your use of the website. To prevent the website from using that data, view it in a private window. From the menu bar in Safari, choose File > New Private Window, or press Shift-Command-N.


If that works, use the following steps to remove the website's data, including its caches and cookies. The website can then create new data as needed. If it's a website that you sign in to, make sure that you know your sign-in information before continuing.


  1. Choose Safari > Settings (or Preferences), then click Privacy.
  2. Click Manage Website Data.
  3. Select the affected website from the list shown.
  4. Click Remove.
  5. Click Done.
  6. Open the website again in a non-private browser window.


Install software updates

Install all available Apple software updates, which can include updates for Safari.


Check VPN or other security software

If you installed VPN or other software that monitors or interacts with your network connections, that software could affect your use of the website or the internet. Learn about network issues related to VPN and other software


Check network settings

Certain network settings, such as those related to using a proxy server or custom DNS server, can affect access to content on the internet. Even if you haven't changed your network settings, you might have installed software that changed those settings for you.


To find out whether the issue is with the network settings on your Mac, try viewing the website from some other device connected to the same network.


To find out whether the issue is with your network itself, try viewing the website after connecting to a different network.


Resolve other issues

 


Let us know if that helps.

Cheers!







Jan 29, 2023 1:48 PM in response to youngwoody

Thanks for your reply - hopefully that will help. But having said that, the unstable Safari seems to be rendering mac OS unstable as well. Safari opens on log-in despite that option not being set in the task bar icon. That’s been happening for several updates. I’ve opened in recovery mode and run disc repair , or what ever they’re calling it now, and reloaded the OS. I’ll try you suggestions.

macOS & Safari

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