Mac, iOS versions of Safari crashing due to search suggestions feature [u]
A number of Mac and iOS users reported Safari crashing on Wednesday, in what appears to be a glitch related to the browser's search suggestions feature. [Updated]

A crash can be triggered simply by trying to enter search terms into Safari's address bar, according to numerous complaints on Twitter. The connection with search suggestions was highlighted by developer Steven Troughton-Smith, who noted that disabling the feature or switching to private browsing will temporarily solve the situation.
The issue appears to manifest regardless of search engine choice, since they all inevitably flow through the same Apple API. People who are unaffected generally have suggestions cached locally, or else access to Apple's servers via a DNS cache. Devices with iOS 7 or earlier should be immune.
People who still have a working copy of Safari should avoid actions that will reset their cache, such as turning on Airplane Mode, since once back online Safari will start trying to fetch suggestions if the feature isn't already disabled.
Apple has yet to comment on the matter or offer a timeline for a fix.
Update: Apple solved the problem later on Wednesday. BuzzFeed News noted that anyone still encountering crashes should deliberately clear Safari's cache.

A crash can be triggered simply by trying to enter search terms into Safari's address bar, according to numerous complaints on Twitter. The connection with search suggestions was highlighted by developer Steven Troughton-Smith, who noted that disabling the feature or switching to private browsing will temporarily solve the situation.
The issue appears to manifest regardless of search engine choice, since they all inevitably flow through the same Apple API. People who are unaffected generally have suggestions cached locally, or else access to Apple's servers via a DNS cache. Devices with iOS 7 or earlier should be immune.
People who still have a working copy of Safari should avoid actions that will reset their cache, such as turning on Airplane Mode, since once back online Safari will start trying to fetch suggestions if the feature isn't already disabled.
Apple has yet to comment on the matter or offer a timeline for a fix.
Update: Apple solved the problem later on Wednesday. BuzzFeed News noted that anyone still encountering crashes should deliberately clear Safari's cache.
Comments
Anyways, you can also just enter your search term in the spotlight(?) screen, when you swipe down or left on the home screen, and then select 'search on web'..
Apple is making massive advancements this year and that is not possible without bugs. I could explain to you why but it basically comes down to this, every change in software has the potential to create multiple bugs. When creating complex software, an infinite number of things can go wrong. It's a miracle that software works as well as it does considering the demands that users have.
What I do know is that Apple continues to hire talent and continue to improve in these areas so they can continue their rate of innovation.
Plus, no statement from them, no acknowledgement, nothing. Meanwhile the press have a field day and even give out incorrect advice about how to workaround the problem.
/sigh
To fix it just uncheck include Safari Suggestions or on older OS X disable spotlight suggestions in Safari. You don't need to disable search provider suggestions like the BBC have published.
I am curious if anyone that had this bug happen (I did this morning) still has it (I do not).
Could be a time related bug on the servers.
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2016/01/safari-suggestions-bug-causes-browser-crashes-in-ios-and-os-x/
My sense is that, as CEO, Tim has left the vision and perfecting of Apple's products to underlings; and they aren't getting the job done as well as they used to under Steve (but still getting it done much better than most other companies...Steve set a very high bar). They still deliver great new features, but it sometimes feels that nobody is sweating the details (other than from a graphic design, does it look pretty perspective). That shouldn't necessarily be the job of the CEO of a multi-billion dollar company, but it's the role Steve Jobs played. If Tim Cook can't fill that role, he needs to ensure someone else does. And they haven't found that person yet.
This is actually a big issue because it shows how software is developed by Apple.
Apples 'suggestions' server(s) crapped out - that can happen - but the client software Safari crashes (or hangs, in case of Safari on OS X) on this, and thats probably a design bug. Anyway, this should have been tested by Apple.
So in short, server crap, safari craps because it hangs on a non essential service and test crap, god knows why.