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DJYSRV

A blog mostly about the Opera browser

Posts tagged with "mobile phones"

Opera offers surfing without squinting

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For those of your who want big results from a small screen, Opera's new release of its web browser for mobile phones should come as a pleasant surprise.

Opera Upgrades Mobile Browser to 8.5
By Nate Mook, BetaNews
November 14, 2005, 12:50 PM

Opera Software on Monday released a new version of its Web browser for Series 60 based mobile phones, such as those offered by Nokia. Opera 8.5 for S60 includes a new zoom function that lets mobile users view images and text in full size. A password manager has also been added in the update.

Other new features include customizable keyboard shortcuts, better image handling and support for more languages. Opera uses a special rendering technology to display full-format Web pages on mobile devices, keeping as much as the original design as possible. Opera 8.5 for S60 devices is available for download now.


Opera has really big plans for mini browser

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Opera plans to put mini browser on 700 million phones!

Carrier execs offer mobile content advice
By Mike Dano, RCR Wireless News mdano@crain.com

Sep 27, 2005

SAN FRANCISCO-Executives from Cingular Wireless L.L.C., VeriSign Inc. subsidiary Jamster!, WiderThan, Orange SA and others took turns discussing the future of wireless content and the mobile Web during the Mobile Software Value Chain forum here, while Opera Software used the event to announce plans to introduce the full Internet to around 700 million Java phone users.

Opera said it plans to distribute its new Java-based Opera Mini Web browser worldwide, although the company did not provide specifics. Opera first announced its Mini browser in August.
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Timo Bruns, vice president of Opera's mobile software efforts, said Opera soon would make its Mini product available to subscribers across the globe. The company hopes its Mini offering will replace WAP browsers with a Java application that allows users to surf standard HTML Web sites rather than just WAP sites.

"We need one Web on all devices," Bruns said. "It's a bit of a futile experience to try to deliver two versions of the same content."

Most mobile phones ship with a WAP Web browser, which only can render Internet sites written in WML or XHTML script. Opera's new Mini browser can render standard HTML Internet sites-which the company said gives phone users access to content usually reserved for desktop computers. The browser essentially squeezes regular Internet sites into a phone screen using server-client technology.

A small phone screen "should not stop us from giving the full Internet experience on a mobile device," Bruns said.

SUN - PCs are relics; mobile phones are the future

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Slashdot reports Sun Pres says future of the Internet is on mobile phones.

In a speech in the heart of Silicon Valley SUn President Jonathan Schwartz called perosnal computers "relics" and said web services will be delivered on devices that go well beyond the desktop. This advocacy of using the Internet on mobile devices has got to be good news for Opera. Here is a snip from the ZDNET summary of his speech.

By Stephen Shankland ZDNET 9/23/05

SAN JOSE, Calif.--Increasingly, the personal computer is a relic.

So asserted Jonathan Schwartz, president of server and software maker Sun Microsystems. Instead, what has become important are Web services on the Internet and the mobile phones most will use to access them, he argued at a Friday speech here at a meeting of the American India Foundation.

"The majority of the applications that will drive the next wave of innovation will be services, not applications that run on the desktop. The real innovation is occurring in the network and the network services," Schwartz said.

Sun, which sells the back-end infrastructure that powers such services, has promulgated variations of this message for years. But there's evidence the idea has some merit.

Schwartz points to the increasing wealth and power of companies, like eBay, Google, Yahoo and Amazon.com, that profit from free services available over the network. Among his audience, many more people said they'd rather have access to Internet services than their desktop computing applications. And Microsoft--the company with the biggest financial stake in the PC software business--has struggled to cope with the arrival of Web services.

The threat to PCs is twofold. Not only are services moving to the network, Schwartz said, but PCs won't be the way people use those services--particularly in poorer areas of the world that have risen higher up Sun's corporate priority list. Instead, that access will come through mobile phones.

TV Offered on Mobile Phones

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Narrowstep is offering television on mobile phones! People in the New York/New Jersey area may be the first to see it.

Scheduled TV Channels on Mobile Phones

Narrowstep Inc., the TV on the Internet Company, has today launched the first platform that enables scheduled, 24 x 7 TV channels and video-on-demand services to be distributed to mobile phones and mobile devices.

Based on Narrowstep's Television Operating System, the system can enable multiple channels with searchable video archives, video-on-demand, scheduled content and live events.

The first dynamically available mobile channel is extreme sports channel, "high.tv," featuring a mix of adventure content such as snowboarding, surfing, windsurfing and mountain biking. Other channels will be rolled out in due course covering subjects such as urban music, cycling and city profiles.

Other potential applications already supported include retail, education, government information, and company and employee TV channels.

Opera Goes 'Mini' for Mobile Phones

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Full text of BETA News article

Opera Goes 'Mini' for Mobile Phones

By Nate Mook, BetaNews nmook@betanews.com
August 10, 2005, 11:37 AM

Opera Software on Wednesday introduced a version of its popular Web browser for Java-enabled mobile phones. Opera Mini serves as an alternative to Opera's current mobile browser, and is designed to allow users to access the Web on phones normally incapable of running a browser.

Red Herring Finds Opera at 10 Year Mark

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http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=13343&hed=Opera+Is+Mobile+Browsing+Diva

Opera: Mobile Browser Diva

The underdog Internet browser company turns 10, asserting its staying power by specializing in mobile browsing.

August 25, 2005

Opera, the underdog web browser, turned 10 this week, proving that tech’s small fries still stand a chance in a Microsoft-dominated world if they stick around long enough to find their niche.

Feisty Opera may not have won the battle for desktop dominance, but the Oslo, Norway-based company is hitting its stride as a creator of browsers for mobile and home media devices.

[Full text at cited URL]

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