2010年12月11日星期六

Smartphone Web Browsers

Smartphone Web Browsers

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Internet-able mobile phones have been out on the market for long enough, and made available from enough major system makers, that now might be a good time in order to assess the state of the web browser in the never-ending mobile phone contest. Especially since now is when a whole bunch of exciting announcements have come out simply by makers of that really software we rely on to get online - web browsers.
Any content that claims to summarize the current state involving smartphone web browsers ought to start with Opera Tiny, as it is far and away the best web browser the cellular device market provides yet produced. Of course, better than Apple's Safari, much better than the Blackberry Visitor. And certainly a lot better than Windows' troubled IE.
Now Opera has jus released the beta start of the next Safari Mini upgrade, Chrome Mobile 9.Five. Once again the best gets better, which is since it should be.
Also recently announced was your impending arrival for the smartphone scene of 1 of the most popular internet explorer in the desktop and laptop markets among both Windows and Apple users -- Mozilla Firefox. This Linux-based web browser has been eagerly-awaited by it's devoted fans considering that smartphones first proceeded to go online. And now their...our wish has answered.
A start-up referred to as Skyfire Labs is also arranging a smartphone browser start sometime soon, nevertheless what we can expect of it is anybody's guess. The Skyfire browser is going to be what's called a "thin-client" visitor, basically meaning that it runs with restricted resources of its individual, mostly running with Mozilla's servers and Chrome desktop browser. The Firefox and Skyfire portable browsers will at first be released, as expected, within beta form.
Private favorites aside, the statistics cite Apple's Safari/iPhone web browser as the reigning champ among U.S. smartphone users (this in accordance with StatCounter), and number two globally. The number one browser around the world, interestingly enough, features yet to be mentioned in this piece - that being Nokia's. (And to think, all this time we though they were exactly the best smartphones for making actual phone calls.)
The large improvement that all smartphone web browsers have both implemented or will likely be wise to any day now is the integration from the desktop interface with all the mobile content shipping format. Now people browsing the web on their handhelds can view a full-screen screen of the entire web page (minus scroll-downs of course) much like they would on their pc or laptop. Next to read a specific percentage of the page, they simply move a sort of magnifier over the section using cursor and zoom in.
Previously, users could just view web pages reformatted in a messy, clunky one column resembling nothing can beat the web pages these are familiar with. This produced navigation next to impossible, even if one was already familiar with the layout of the site (as it would appear on a full-sized computer). Thank goodness pertaining to progress.
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