Friday, 20. January 2006, 15:53:40
Opera, mobile devices, beta
Opera
announced this week a deal with
Bytemobile to offer that firms technologies to speed up the operations of the browser on mobile devices. Bytemobile, based in Mountain View, Calif., markets a technology known as Optimization Services Node (OSN) that carriers use to speed mobile Internet performance.
Bytemobile claims that OSN has been deployed by 60 operators worldwide, including Willcom, serving a total of nearly 1 billion subscribers.
In a separate
announcement Opera released Mobile 8.5 Web browser for Windows Mobile Pocket PC (PPC). Opera 8.5 beta runs on Windows Mobile 2003 and 5.0, offering Opera's fast Web surfing on the full range of Windows Mobile Pocket PC devices. Users should remind themselves this is a
BETA product and expect the unexpected in terms of performance.
Opera is
expected to launch its Opera
Mini mobile browser, which is based on Opera Mobile but designed for even simpler handsets, sometime before the end of January. In June, the company launched Opera for Windows Mobile 2003.
The bulk of Opera's revenues come from non-desktop devices including mobile devices, set top boxes and portable media players, although Opera's desktop business continues to be important because it tends to drive innovation on the browser. Earlier this year Opera inked a
deal with Google to share search revenues from Opera browser users. Updates to the deal with Google are specically targeted at mobile device applications. Opera was able to drop licensing fees for its desktop browser and passed the 100 million mark in downloads as a result due to the revenues expected to be coming in from search deals.
Wednesday, 16. November 2005, 02:32:15
Opera, AJAX, software development kit, mobile devices
The
AJAX programming environment, which stands for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, is a way of speeding up the exchange of data between a user client application and the server. In a wireless environment this technological advantage is very clear. Opera has taken a step in this direction by
issuing a software development kit (SDK) to build AJAX applications for mobile phones. There has been a lot written about AJAX, and both Yahoo and Hotmail will use this technology for their next editions of web-email. Yahoo is likely the first out of the box with the
deployment of technology acquired through Oddpost in July 2004. Hotmail is in beta under the code name
'Kahuna. Both web email products are expected to heavily reply on AJAX programming to speed delivery of data to users. Neither application is designed, at least for now, for mobile devices. However, don't expect that situation to remain that way for long.
Here's a brief media
report from WebProNews
Opera Brings AJAX To Mobile Developers
David Utter
Staff Writer
WebProNews
Published: 2005-11-15
Creators of Asynchronous Javascript and XML applications can obtain a beta release of the Opera Platform software development kit to use in building web applications for mobile phones.
The creators of the excellent Opera web browser have released their SDK for creating mobile web applications. The SDK supports AJAX development, to allow for more dynamic applications without sacrificing platform independence.
Developers can integrate native phone applications with web-based content such as weather or stock data, Opera noted on its site about the platform. Business users could combine phone-stored contact information with a remote enterprise application.
"The full Web browser has proved itself as a central application on mobile phones and is today the main source for data traffic on mobile networks," says says Timo Bruns, Vice President for Business Development, Opera Software.
AJAX technology provides an interface between a web browser and a back-end web server. This allows content displayed in the browser to be updated without refreshing and reloading the entire page. Examples of AJAX can be seen in applications like Google Maps and Yahoo News online.