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Opera Mini Blog

Developer answers, part 1

Even though your rendering removes horizontal scrolling, are you looking at ways to better utilize trackballs in some mobiles? BB Pearl, Sidekick, several others take a step to move beyond the D-Pad in most mobile phones, it would be nice if Opera can keep up with them. (Eddie_Lopez)


The BlackBerry Pearl trackball has wonderful speed and precision. We think we can make even better use of it in the future.

What is the makeup of the development team? How many "core" developers do you have and how many other teams contribute.. ie- how large is the project? (Eddie_Lopez)


The main roles in the "core mini" engineering team are: client developers, client quality assurance (supporting 600+ devices is a lot of work!), server developers, server quality assurance, system administrators, delivery managers and project managers.

In addition to these we use a lot of resources provided by other teams in Opera. The translation team helps us translate Opera Mini into 35+ languages. We use the same Opera Core as e.g. the desktop Opera, but on the serverside.

Will there ever be support for a 90-degrees rotated mode? (tinhoy)


The main reason that we have not done this so far is that it currently is not possible to rotate the dialogs and prompts provided by the phone's UI. Thanks to the SSR rendering there is also relatively little benefit in making the screen 20% wider, compared to when using regular rendering.

We are however keeping our options open on this issue. :smile:

Generally speaking...are vendors coming to you guys? Or are you shopping Mini out to all the vendors? (Eddie_Lopez)


It's a combination. Opera Software of course has many well-established lines of communications with manufacturers and operators, having been in the mobile browsing business for quite some time now. There are also many cases of companies coming to us. Meeting a new operator/manufacturer for the first time only to realize that the people there are hardcore Opera Mini fans happens fairly regularly, and it does give your a warm fuzzy feeling. :smile:

Keep the questions coming!

Finally, here's an action shot of one of the main developers (Mr White) celebrating the birthday in front of the Opera Software office in Linköping, Sweden:

Opera Mini turns oneTesting Opera Mini in the USA

Comments

tinhoy 26. January 2007, 18:15

Thank you for the answers.

I always thought
that allowing one
to use a larger font
size without the
accompanying short
line lengths would
be a very good
benefit.

I often wondered why it wouldn't be included. Now I know. It never did occur to me that having a consistent orientation with the phone UI's would be a big factor. Guess that's why all the smart people are at Opera! :smile:

FataL 26. January 2007, 19:46

Heh. The office building in Sweden looks much better than Norway office. :smile:
Beautiful picture!

Volts 2. February 2007, 13:07

My o.m. is falling apart.I no longer can acess the start page,bookmarks all I can do is enter a address (still can acess menu). What the heck happened & how can it be fixed? Attempted to download o.m. again but wont send program to my phone again.hope someone can help.

padule 7. February 2007, 14:38

i wanted to drop a small comment about the "widescreen" option, aka 90-degrees rotated mode.
johansch says here that the (main) reason why they didn't do this is because the dialogs of the native UI of the phone cannot be rotated.
but you have to consider the fact that if you have to input something you would ANYWAY need to rotate the phone back in position in order to press the buttons correctly (especially to input text). in such a case having the dialogs rotated would even be a disadvantage.
in my opinion there are no drawbacks at all in a 90-degrees rotated mode.

mavericio 18. February 2007, 20:12

I hav 2 report a few probs using om on my 6630.While browsing the site orkut,we cant execute the commands embedded in cached image lik add friend or submit scrap.Is there any solution?N why cant yahoo 'beta' be browsed,i hav no clue.

tekg 17. March 2007, 15:58

why have you bastardized the opera product line? Now all opera is known for is bloatware, sloppy coding (crashes are a fact of Opera life) and now paid search results. You have bastardized a once great product. Either you dev's or the boys in management. One way or another, get it fixed. Opera is crap these days and a shell of its former self. And I'm talking about the WHOLE product line.

WhineWhine 18. March 2007, 21:41

Google has paid search results too.

But why are you spamming people's blogs with your inane drivel? Stop posting the same thing over and over again. It's clearly against the rules.

Crashes are a fact of all browser lives, because they are complex pieces of software. Stop trolling.

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