Tag Archive: Opera

Things are heating up in the browser arena lately, and there’s been a lot of news to cover. This segment brings you the latest news about all web browsers.

Internet Explorer: Last week, on HitsLink, a browser tracking web site, it was shown that for the month of June, Internet Explorer began to gain market share — it gained 0.57 percent, which seems small on paper but is a huge increase in users for a browser that has been losing popularity for years. Internet Explorer claimed this share back from Firefox, which dropped from 25 percent share to 24 percent. Apparently the browser is still used by “more than 6 out of 10 people” and IE8 is used by “more than one in four users on the Web”, according to Ars Technica.

Microsoft also launched IE9 platform preview 3 at an event in San Francisco last week – the latest iteration boasts how the browser effectively beats the competition on speed, with videos being shown, as well as a download being offered. The new browser offers Direct X 9 and 10 integration and uses the GPU for acceleration — the browser can render interactive content at a higher frame rate then other browsers, as shown off in the video on Windows Team Blog.

Google Chrome: Chrome has overtaken Safari for third place overall on a weekly basis, making it the number three browser, behind Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox, with 28.5 percent market share. Apparently, Google Chrome’s been in third place for a while, but it’s the first time in the U.S. that it’s beaten Apple’s Safari, Engadget reports.

A Google employee also said that Google is currently experimenting with web applications further in Google Chrome, with new builds offering web applications that load in the background with constantly updated data – in web applications such as GMail.

Mozilla Firefox: Mozilla announced today that Firefox has reached over 2 billion add ons downloads, with 60,000 add ons in the extension gallery online, according to Mashable. Mozilla Firefox 4.0 is well underway with a beta expected in the near future after the early “Beta 1″ was released on Mozilla servers last week, and then pulled shortly after – Firefox 4.0 will feature large improvements with a new, faster JavaScript engine, HTML5 support, new themes for Windows/Mac/Linux and more.

Mozilla also submitted its iPhone application – “Firefox home” to Apple for approval recently, and is awaiting the go-ahead from Apple to begin offering its app on the iPhone store. The application simply syncs the user’s history to their phone — the history is synchronized from the Mozilla Sync add on (Formerly Mozilla Weave) on the desktop. When clicked it sends the user to the built in Safari client.

Opera: Version 10.6 has just landed, hot on the heels of 10.5 — it features WebM support (the first browser in final version to support it) and faster JavaScript support. To try it out, head over to the Opera website here.

According to the Opera Desktop Team blog, Opera 10.52 for Windows and Mac is officially out the door. However, the big story here is the Mac version, which has seen a complete re-design both on the outside and inside. The Linux version is not yet available.

Just 11 days after the release of the second beta, Opera has put the final touches on the Mac version of its web browser. According to their press release, Opera is calling 10.52 the “world’s fastest browser for Mac.” Equipped with a completely new JavaScript engine, called Carakan, Opera 10.52 for Mac brings users multitouch trackpad support, Growl, HTML5 functionality, and a new Cocoa based interface.

CNet notes that the browser is compatible with older versions of Mac computers. This is something that competing browsers have been steering clear of. Even old school PowerPC machines can run Opera 10.52. You can view the changelog here.

Visit the Opera website to download Opera 10.52 for Mac.

View: Source

Following last week’s approval of Opera Mini into the App Store, the Skyfire team is now looking to bring their mobile web browser to Apple. Posted on their company blog, CEO Jeff Glueck congratulated the Opera team and teased at upcoming support for ‘iDevices’.

Skyfire, similar to Opera Mini, renders all web content through a remote server running the Gecko engine and presents it to users on their mobile device. Users can consequently view Flash, Silverlight, and Quicktime content on the web without needing the respective plugins or a powerful device.

With yesterday’s news that Apple has approved OperaMini as a browser in the iPhone app store, competition in the mobile browser space took a big step forward.

Everyone at Skyfire was heartened by this decision by Apple, to open up their platform and believe this sets a solid precedent for additional innovation in mobile browsing from other companies.

Skyfire believes this approval is a solid first step and there’s still major consumer demand for great rich media and video browsing on these devices. Our philosophy is that enhanced speed AND all the rich media of the web can be together in one browser.

The Skyfire team has been watching the Opera submission and the iPhone/iPad market closely, and this will certainly accelerate our strategy on iDevices. Nothing to announce now, but stay tuned for news. If you want to stay updated, please follow Skyfire on Facebook or Twitter and be the first to hear.

Congrats again to Team Apple and Team Opera, you made the consumer the biggest winner this week.

Jeff

Here’s a demo of Skyfire 1.5 for Symbian S60 devices:

View: Source

Opera has launched a native beta version of Opera Mini 5 for the Windows Mobile platform today. The browser will support both Windows Mobile 5 and 6. The great part about this being a native app is the power it gives the browser. Opera Mini is now specifically optimized for the platform and free from the shackles of running under Java.

Opera excels at making mobile browser, and this version of Opera Mini is no different. Opera Mini 5 is extremely fast, as it compresses data by up to 90 percent, improving page-load speeds by significant amounts. Opera also notes that this can save you from going over your carrier defined quota for data transfer. Opera Mini 5 also has all the standard bells and whistles that users have come to love. It has tabbed browsing, a password manager, bookmark sync, a download manager, and Speed Dial.

Opera’s VP of Products, Dag Olav Norem, feels that Windows Mobile deserves a better browser than what Microsoft ships pre-installed. You can try the Opera Mini 5 beta by visiting m.opera.com/next from your Windows Mobile device. You can read more about the browser and its features on Opera’s website.

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