{"id":15470,"date":"2011-10-11T10:55:01","date_gmt":"2011-10-11T17:55:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.wapreview.com\/?p=15470"},"modified":"2011-11-06T12:48:50","modified_gmt":"2011-11-06T19:48:50","slug":"bolt-3-0-for-android-now-available-to-all","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/15470\/","title":{"rendered":"Bolt 3.0 For Android Now Available To All"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a> <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n Bitstream’s Bolt Browser for Android<\/a> is out of beta and available in the Android Market. I haven’t been able to find a direct download link (needed for users with non-“Google Experience” devices which don’t have the Android Market). Android 2.1 or latter is required.\u00a0Although labeled 3.0, this is actually the first public release of Bolt for Android. The latest Bolt for Java and Blackberry is 2.5 hence the 3.0 version.<\/p>\n Features of BOLT 3.0 for Android include:<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n I gave Bolt 3.0 a try on my old HTC Magic phone running Android 2.2. Attempting to upgrade over the Bolt Beta gave a “Invalid Certificate” error. \u00a0After I un-installed the Beta installation went smoothly. The Magic\u00a0has a slow processor and only 192 MB of RAM (30 MB free at\u00a0start up). I ran into some issues, including lock ups and videos not playing, which I suspect had more to do with the phone’s limited memory than with inherent defects in Bolt. However, Opera Mini and the UC Browser work without problems on this phone so it appears that Bolt demands\u00a0significantly\u00a0more system resources than competing proxy browsers.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n On sites that Bolt did work with, most pages loaded quickly, scrolling was fluid and smooth, and rendering was generally accurate other than some minor\u00a0overlapping\u00a0of page elements.\u00a0I was disapointed by the quality of images in Bolt. \u00a0Although I had image quality set to the highest level in the browser’s\u00a0settings, most images were not very sharp. See the screen shots for some\u00a0examples of overlapping or truncated text and low image quality (click a screenshot to zoom to full size).<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n I will retest Bolt 3.0 on my wife’s HTC Evo and will update this post tomorrow to reflect Bolt’s performance on a modern device.<\/p>\n Update<\/strong>: On an HTC EVO (1Ghz Snapdragon, \u00a0512 MB RAM (120 MB free)) I had no problems playing the YouTube and CNN videos that did not work on the Magic. \u00a0However Bolt still locked up solid when trying to log into the Twitter desktop site and when saving settings in the Dabr Twitter client.<\/p>\n On both phones, Bolt also had problems with Twitter’s mobile site at m.twitter.com, displaying a “Rate limit exceeded” error when attempting to log in. \u00a0The Bolt Twitter Webapp worked but doesn’t allow you to follow limits in tweets.<\/p>\n At this point Bolt for Android seems very much a release 1.0 product, full of promise but not something I would choose for regular use.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Bitstream’s Bolt Browser for Android is out of beta and available in the Android Market. I haven’t been able to find a direct download link (needed for users with non-“Google Experience” devices which don’t have the Android Market). Android 2.1 or latter is required.\u00a0Although labeled 3.0, this is actually the first public release of Bolt for Android. The latest Bolt for Java and Blackberry is 2.5 hence the 3.0 version. Features of BOLT 3.0 for Android include: Server side compression … Continue reading \n