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 pertaining to long enough, and offered by enough major system makers, that today might be a good time to assess the state of the web browser in the never-ending mobile phone contest. Especially since now is when a complete bunch of exciting ads have come out by makers of that very software we rely on to get online : web browsers.
Any article that claims to sum up the current state associated with smartphone web browsers ought to start with Opera Little, as it is far and away the most effective web browser the cellular device market offers yet produced. Of course, better than Apple's Safari, much better than the Blackberry Visitor. And certainly better than Windows' troubled IE.
And now Opera has jus released the beta start of the next Chrome Mini upgrade, Chrome Mobile 9.Five. Once again the best is getting better, which is because it should be.
Also lately announced was the particular impending arrival about the smartphone scene of just one of the most popular browsers in the desktop and also laptop markets amongst both Windows and also Apple users : Mozilla Firefox. This Linux-based web browser has been eagerly-awaited by their devoted fans given that smartphones first proceeded to go online. And now their...our wish is being answered.
A start-up named Skyfire Labs is also arranging a smartphone browser start sometime soon, however what we can expect of it is anybody's suppose. The Skyfire browser will probably be what's called a "thin-client" internet browser, basically meaning that it runs with minimal resources of its own, mostly running using Mozilla's servers and Safari desktop browser. Both Firefox and Skyfire cell browsers will initially be released, as expected, inside beta form.
Personalized favorites aside, the information cite Apple's Safari/iPhone web browser as the reigning champ amongst U.S. smart phone users (this as outlined by StatCounter), and number two internationally. The number one browser around the world, interestingly enough, has yet to be mentioned with this piece - that will being Nokia's. (And to believe, all this time we all though they were only the best smartphones in making actual phone calls.)
The big improvement that all mobile phone web browsers have both implemented or is going to be wise to any day now is the integration in the desktop interface using the mobile content supply format. Now consumers browsing the web on the handhelds can view a full-screen window of the entire website (minus scroll-downs of course) the same as they would on their computer's desktop or laptop. After that to read a specific part of the page, they only move a sort of magnifier over the section with their cursor and zoom in.
Before, users could simply view web pages reformatted in a very messy, clunky one column resembling not like the web pages these are familiar with. This made navigation next to impossible, even when one was already informed about the layout of the web site (as it would appear with a full-sized computer). Thank goodness for progress.
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