{"id":16287,"date":"2011-12-12T11:56:19","date_gmt":"2011-12-12T18:56:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.wapreview.com\/?p=16287"},"modified":"2011-12-16T08:24:37","modified_gmt":"2011-12-16T15:24:37","slug":"bolt-browser-discontinued-servers-to-shut-down-in-2-days","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/16287\/","title":{"rendered":"Bolt Browser Discontinued! Servers Shut Down"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n The popular Android and Mobile Java proxy browser Bolt, \u00a0is being discontinued. The cloud service that it runs on will be shut down on Dec 14th, 2011. \u00a0The news came in the form of a cryptic message overlay that started appearing today in the browser. It reads<\/p>\n Dear Bolt User, the free BOLT mobile browsing service will be discontinued starting Dec-14, 2011. Unfortunately, the economic circumstances prevent us from running a free service going forward. We apologize for any inconvenience and thank you for your loyalty and support. more<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n The “more” link returns a 404 “Not found” error. PC vistors to Boltbrowser.com see a similar message. Other pages on the boltbrowser.com<\/a> domain like boltbrowser.com\/forum and boltbrowser.com\/download also return “Not found” errors. The Bolt app has been removed from the Android Market as well. The message suggests that Bolt may continue as a paid app but I’ve been unable to find any information about that and the sudden closure of the Bolt Forum and help pages suggests that a paid version is not imminent.<\/p>\n Proxy browsers like Bolt are an important part of the mobile Web infrastructure. They allow old and low end feature phones to browse virtually the entire web and cut data traffic by up to 90%, which speeds up page loads on slow networks and saves money for users on metered data plans. \u00a0Bolt was one of the big three of proxy browsers, along with Opera Mini<\/a> and the UC Browser<\/a>. \u00a0Bolt was unique in that in addition to reformating and compressing Web pages on the server, it also transcoded Flash and HTML5 video into a format that most phones could display.<\/p>\n Bolt is a product of Bitstream\u00a0Ltd., whose main business is font tecnology. \u00a0Bitsream has been posting losses<\/a> for \u00a0while and is in the process of merging with Monotype, another font foundry. As part of the merger, Bitstream’s non-font assets, including Bolt, are being spun off into a new company called \u00a0Marlborough Software Development Holdings Inc. whose first order of business seems to be\u00a0liquidating\u00a0the unprofitable browser business.<\/p>\n Proxy browsers are supported by selling search engine and default bookmark placements and licensing the technology to handset makers and operators. \u00a0Transcoding Web content is expensive but transcoding video is an order of magnitute more so, which I suspect made Bolt unsustainable economically. Opera Mini and UC do not transcode video so hopefully they will survive. Opera says that Opera Mini is profitable. \u00a0I don’t know about UC, which I think is privately held.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" The popular Android and Mobile Java proxy browser Bolt, \u00a0is being discontinued. The cloud service that it runs on will be shut down on Dec 14th, 2011. \u00a0The news came in the form of a cryptic message overlay that started appearing today in the browser. It reads Dear Bolt User, the free BOLT mobile browsing service will be discontinued starting Dec-14, 2011. Unfortunately, the economic circumstances prevent us from running a free service going forward. We apologize for any inconvenience … Continue reading