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Flash Goes Mobile

Opera's latest browser tries to improve the mobile Internet experience with Flash.

By Duncan Graham-Rowe

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

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No matter how much money you spend on a cell phone, the Web you see on its small screen isn't quite the same as the one you view on a laptop. Some features often can't run on mobile-phone Web browsers. But the latest version of Opera Mobile could bring more of the Web to your mobile world. Capable of displaying full Flash media content, Opera Mobile version 9.5 makes it possible to use cell phones and handheld computers to view online animations and movies.

Web to go: A new mobile browser has been launched that can display full Flash media content. This makes it possible for users to view far more of the Web on a mobile phone than they could previously.
Credit: Opera

Stripped-down versions of the Web have been offered to mobile users in the past. But these have been widely viewed as flops, says Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Opera Software, based in the Norwegian capital of Oslo. "There is only one Web, and that's what the end user wants," he says.

Recently, there have been improvements in the design of mobile browsers and their user interfaces in an effort to deliver a more complete Web-browsing experience via mobile devices. But even the swanky browser in Apple's iPhone doesn't support Flash, which puts a limit on the content that users can access with the device.

"A full version of Flash inside the browser makes it possible for users to view the normal versions of video-based websites like YouTube or DailyMotion," says Ian Fogg, research director with London-based analyst firm Jupiter Research.

Story continues below

Some phones offer a lightweight version, called Flash Lite--which is how iPhone users are able to access YouTube--but it has reduced sound and video quality, and only a small minority of devices offer it.

Opera Software was spun out of the Norwegian telecom company Telenor in 1995 and is famed for concentrating almost exclusively on mobile browsing. In addition to offering Flash, the company claims that its latest version can run 2.5 times faster than Microsoft's mobile browser. "Speed is our focus," says von Tetzchner. It is something that the company is very proud of, and it's largely due to optimizing the code so that it runs more efficiently on the limited processing resources of a mobile device, he says.

Comments

  • Web is already a success in Japan
    The Web already is a big success here in Japan. It not a success because it has the same features as on a large screen. It is a success because people want to use there phone and so sites are often written to work on phones. They do not want to wait till they are home to surf. Also the culture does not have 6 Tvs in a house were everyone has lots of private space with a large screen just for them selves.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    ryuuguu
    02/14/2008
    Posts:13
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
  • Already been done...
    First off let me state that I am glad that this sort of thing is getting more exposure in the US market. This country to long has been held down by the cellular carriers which control our connections.

    Now that being said, the browser on my Nokia already plays full flash videos. Nokia's browser is pretty amazing, from what I have read its based on KDE's webkit, the same code-base which Safari and the iPhone's browser share. Late in 2007 adobe released a flash light 3.0 beta, since then this sort of implementation has been possible. There have been a few stand alone applications for various mobile operating systems since then, but I believe that Nokia's browser was the first to accomplish this inside of the web browser.

    I have been an Opera user since version 5 on the desktop and since day one on the phone. Opera Mobile has been overdue for a re-write and I am very excited for the forthcoming beta.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    malaeum
    02/17/2008
    Posts:6
    Avg Rating:
    3/5

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