{"id":18342,"date":"2012-07-12T10:51:24","date_gmt":"2012-07-12T17:51:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.wapreview.com\/?p=18342"},"modified":"2012-07-12T10:54:41","modified_gmt":"2012-07-12T17:54:41","slug":"uc-browser-8-4-for-java-released-with-bug-fixes-new-features","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/18342\/","title":{"rendered":"UC Browser 8.4 for Java Released With Bug Fixes, New Features"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n UC Mobile LTD quietly released a new version of the UC Browser for Java ME a couple of days ago. It’s version 8.4. By convention even numbered point releases of UC such as 8.4 are “stable” releases that contain few or no new features while odd numbered versions like 8.3 are “new feature” releases. So 8.4 is basically 8.3 minus the bugs.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n 8.4 incorporates the following features that were added in 8.3:<\/p>\n 8.4 also includes a few, relatively minor new features of its own<\/p>\n I tested UC 8.4 on three phones; a Motorola WX400 Rambler basic QWERTY feature phone, a Nokia Asha 303 touchscreen QWERTY and a pure touch Samsung S8500 running bada 1.0.<\/p>\n The browser installed and ran with no real issues on any of the phones. Page loads were snappy, bookmark backup and restore, which is buggy in the Symbian version of 8.4, worked quickly and correctly.<\/p>\n There were a couple of minor issues. Navigation on the touchscreen devices was somewhat hampered by menus that weren’t very finger friendly (image above, left). On the Asha, none of the QWERTY keyboard shortcuts, except space for page down, worked. I ended up locking the keyboard in Alt mode and uing the 9 key non-QWERTY shortcuts instead. The QWERTY shortcuts did work on the WV400.<\/p>\n All the pages I tried loaded without error except for the mobile version of Twitter which frequently threw the infamous “403 Forbidden (Rate Limit Exceeded)” error just like it has in every version of the UC Browser for over a year. You’d think that Twitter would want their site to work in a browser that\u00a0claims\u00a050 million active users and is the most popular browser in a little country called China. Third party Twitter clients like dabr.eu worked without error.<\/p>\n Rendering seemed no better or worse than with previous UC releases. Mobile formatted pages generally looked great. Desktop pages were not as good. As long as I stuck with the default rendering mode (images top, right and below, right), which reformats pages into a single column like Opera Mini’s “mobile view”, pages were readable and usable although they look nothing like the web designer intended. The “zoom” or deskop mode, which is supposed to format the page to look like it would look in a desktop browser still has many issues including lots of extra white space, text that’s too large and background images that are too small (images below).<\/p>\n Beautiful rendering has never been UC Browser’s strong suit. Where it\u00a0excels\u00a0is in bring much of the power of a desktop browser with a fast\u00a0connection\u00a0to basic feature phones on slow, expensive networks. UC Browser 8.4 retains all UC’s traditional strengths which include;<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/a><\/p>\n UC Browser 8.4 is a recommended upgrade for all UC Browser Java version users.\u00a0Download it from wap.ucweb.com<\/a> (mobile) or ucweb.com\/English\/UCbrowser\/download.html<\/a> (PC). For a direct link to the signed version, which can be hard to find with some mobile browsers, click here<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" UC Mobile LTD quietly released a new version of the UC Browser for Java ME a couple of days ago. It’s version 8.4. By convention even numbered point releases of UC such as 8.4 are “stable” releases that contain few or no new features while odd numbered versions like 8.3 are “new feature” releases. So 8.4 is basically 8.3 minus the bugs. 8.4 incorporates the following features that were added in 8.3: UDisk – Download content from the web to … Continue reading \n
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