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A Blog From Behind the Trenches

Attack of the Bugs

Posts tagged with "mobile"

Wap Review: The Truth About Opera Mobile 10 Memory Usage

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I have noticed some comments wondering about the allegedly high memory usage in the Opera Mobile 10 beta, and while I am sure there will be further optimizations before the final versions, I also think some people have somewhat unrealistic expectations.

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Jon S. von Tetzchner is one of GigaOM’s Top 15 Mobile Influencers

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Less than a month ago, Jon SvT was listed as one of the top 40 to watch in mobile by telecoms.com.

Now GigaOM has created a list of the top 15 mobile influencers, and Jon is on that list as well:

Below are GigaOM editors’ top 15 most influential people in the Mobile Internet; together they make up the inaugural Mobilize 15 Influencers, a list that is going to be published annually in tandem with our Mobilize conference. We have purposely listed them in no particular order

You can read their reason for including him in the list:

As co-founder and CEO, Jon S. Von Tetzchner recognized that mobile browsers lacked in key areas such as speed and web page rendering, and led the effort to cement the Opera mobile browsers as major players in the space. This push into the mobile phone segment was so successful that Opera is now included on a significant number of smartphones shipped worldwide.

There's even a poll where GigaOM readers can vote for their #1 from the 15 people listed.

Jon S. von Tetzchner is one of the "top 40 to watch in mobile"

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Telecoms.com has compiled a list of the top 40 people to watch in the mobile industry:

Who really holds the reins in the mobile communications industry? This is a question with an endless answer, so intricate and complex are the webs which create the mobile services on which billions of people rely every day.


The list is of course their subjective opinion, which is always the case with such lists.

They also have a bio page with a brief description of Jon and some of his and Opera's accomplishments.

AdMob: iPhone makes up 50% of US mobile Web traffic on smartphones

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TechCrunch reports that AdMob claims that the iPhone makes up 50% of US mobile Web traffic on smartphones. There is just a small problem here, and that is that the data is only based on AdMob's mobile ad network, which favours the iPhone, according to the Business Insider:

AdMob's stats significantly favor the iPhone because of its vast ad inventory in iPhone apps -- ads that are not available on other phones -- and on iPhone-tailored Web sites, which won't work on some phones


So it looks like AdMob's data is anything but representative of anything but, well, AdMob's own iPhone-favouring ad network. Many of the comments at TechCrunch seem to have caught this small and yet significant detail.

Opera's State of the Mobile Web report obviously only covers Opera Mini users, but gives actual insights into what kind of sites people visit with their phones. It also keeps reports the handsets used to run the application.

Opera Mini can be installed on both feature phones and smartphones.

Opera Fingertouch helps you hit the right link when browing from your phone

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We announced Opera Fingertouch today:

Fingertouch provides visual feedback when you hit a Web link, and assists you when you come across multiple links or other selectable elements in close proximity to one another.

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New "iPhone killer", HTC Touch Diamond, reveals Opera Mobile 9.5 secrets

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A couple of days ago, HTC revealed their new "iPhone killer", the HTC Touch Diamond. The phone looks extremely promising, and I'm actually considering a purchase if they can manage to work out the kinks from the demo version (it seems slow at times). Better yet, the phone uses the new Opera Mobile 9.5 for a "better internet experience".

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Opera's mobile market share is more than 50%?

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According to a recent report from ABI Research, the mobile browser market is set to really explode in the coming years, which is something Opera has known for years. But the report reveals an interesting detail on the number of Web-enabled phones (emphasis mine):

ABI Research sees this segment of the mobile browser market accounting for the vast majority of growth over the next five years, as the open-Internet browser (OIB) segment for mobile grows from 76 million in 2007 to nearly 700 million browsers delivered in 2013.


A Norwegian analyst made the connection, and pointed out that Opera apparently has a market share of 54% in this segment. According to our fourth quarter presentation, Opera shipped on a total of 40.8 million handsets in 2007, and the analyst states that this does not include Opera Mini.

If these numbers are correct, then Opera is currently the dominant mobile browser, by far. And with the incredible growth potential, it is hardly strange that more and more companies are jumping on the bandwagon.

Mozilla Q&A: Redefines mobile browsing - again, dismisses competition - again

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In a recent Q&A, Mozilla's John Lilly kindly shares som details on how Mozilla will finally redefine mobile Web browsing.

Sound familiar?

After their failed Minimo mobile browser project, they are now ready to rinse and repeat. But not without commenting on the competition, of course. Or the lack of it, if Mozilla is to be believed. Provided, of course, that the journalist has not taken liberties when "translating" Lilly's answers.

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Official Opera Mobile blog!

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The Opera Mobile team has finally set up its own blog! Like the desktop team and Opera Mini blogs, you can subscribe if you want to stay up to date on what's going on with Opera. Check it out here:

http://my.opera.com/operamobile/blog/

Does Opera Mini 4 rip off iPhone?

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Even though I am primarily involved in Opera Desktop, I am very happy to see the success the Opera Mini team is having with their new baby. It's certainly raising a few eyebrows out there, and overall, people seem to love it.

This launch has not been without controversies, though. Our little Apple spoof ad has ruffled a few feathers out there.

One thing they are getting caught up in is that the spoof ad is comparing software (Opera Mini) to hardware (iPhone), but I don't think they are getting the point. Opera Mini is available right now, and can be used on almost any phone. You don't need a $600 device to browse the full Web on your mobile phone.

I'll quote Mobility Now:

This is a revolutionary product. It’s bigger than the iPhone. Why? Because over one billion people currently use a cellphone, and are restricted to browse only WAP pages because they don’t have a smartphone. Yet the vast majority support Java, and by downloading this simple 200k program, they can now browse the full Internet with a desktop like experience, right now, for free.


Another issue I've seen brought up a few times is that the overview mode and zooming in Opera Mini 4 is a ripoff of the iPhone browser. To be fair, I won't get into how Apple claimed to do full mobile browsing first. Let's instead look at the assumption that Apple invented zooming and panning in Web browsers...

While a lot of people may not be aware that Nokia has been doing this for quite some time with their new mobile browser, it is slightly more surprising that they are unaware that the Wii browser (Opera!) also gives you an overview mode where you can choose to zoom in on specific parts of the page. The DS browser also does similar things, and even Microsoft's experimental, er, "Web site image viewer" Deepfish starts zoomed out, and allows you to zoom in to view interesting content in more detail.

I am sure that iPhone will be a wonderful device, but it will also be "wonderfully" expensive, and out of reach to a lot of people. And while Apple is bragging about zooming and panning in their mobile browser, the rest of us can simply use one of the many browsers on various devices that do this already. And if you have a Java enabled phone, you would most likely be able to install Opera Mini, which means that you won't have to buy a new phone to get the full Web in your pocket, right now.

Forbes on Must-Have Mobile Software, but no Opera Mini/Mobile

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Forbes has a story on Must-Have Mobile Software, but Opera doesn't seem to be mentioned at all.

The author does mention browsers in general, though. She doesn't like them.

Mobile browsers are getting better, but can be a pain, especially if you aren't paying for an ultra speedy cellular data connection.


It doesn't sound like she has tried Opera Mini, which is surprising for a list of "Must-Have Mobile Software", seeing as Opera Mini has frequently been mentioned as a must-have by other publications. Opera Mini compresses pages before displaying them, which means that it is faster, and costs less if you don't have an unlimited data plan.

I wonder if it would be worth trying to contact the author, Rachel Rosmarin, about this. Perhaps she is simply not aware of Opera Mini or even Opera Mobile?

On the other hand, she does seem to like widgets, which will make her happy with Opera 9 for Mobile when that becomes available.