{"id":5040,"date":"2009-09-02T12:12:49","date_gmt":"2009-09-02T19:12:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=5040"},"modified":"2009-09-02T19:33:10","modified_gmt":"2009-09-03T02:33:10","slug":"opk-calls-the-n900-the-best-browser-device-ever-heres-hoping-it-really-is","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/5040\/","title":{"rendered":"Nokia CEO calls the N900 “the best browser device ever” Is It?"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’m really hoping that OPK is right as I don’t consider the iPhone’s browser all that great. It’s OK, with pretty good rendering and JavaScript support and it’s easy to use.\u00a0 I don’t even mind that it doesn’t support Flash, personally I wish Flash would just die.<\/p>\n The real issue I have with the iPhone browser and every other Webkit based mobile browser I’ve ever used is that it seems unable to cache visited pages locally for quick retrieval on a slow network. When you hit the back button on the iPhone the previous page has to be slowly downloaded otver the network. Compare that with Opera Mini or Mobile which store a dozen or more pages in cache for instant retrieval even in areas of no connectivity. The lack of cache even breaks some sites like Bloglines Mobile that change state everytime they are reloaded.<\/p>\n Flash lovers will be happy that the N900 browser supports\u00a0 current desktop browser Flash 9.4.\u00a0 It is Mozilla, aka Firefox, rather than Webkit based so hopefully the cache will work.\u00a0 Somewhat worrying is that previous Mozilla based\u00a0 mobile browsers have\u00a0 been a bit underwhelming.\u00a0 The Nokia developed, but Mozilla based N800\/N810 browser is OK, if a bit slow. Fennec<\/em>, Mozilla’s own next generation mobile browser is, after several Betas, barely usable.<\/p>\n I’ve been watching a hands on video of the N900 in action.\u00a0 Click the image above to view the video. It’s the only one I’ve seen that shows the browser in action.\u00a0 The browser demo starts at about 1:15 into the clip.\u00a0 It generally looks pretty good.\u00a0 Page loads seem nice and snappy, as does zooming, which can be done either with a double tap or a rather gimmicky swirling gesture. As for the cache, the video is inconclusive.\u00a0 At about the two minute point in the clip the visual history screen is shown and a page is loaded from history.\u00a0 It comes up instantly.\u00a0 Great, but the page that was chosen to load from history seems to be the current page, which doesn’t really prove much of anything.<\/p>\n Another video, below, was shot today on the show floor. It also shows a page being retrieved from history at about the 2:50 point.\u00a0 The screen goes blank and the browser is obviously re-downloading the page.\u00a0 That’s not good but it’s not clear how deep in the history the uncached page was. No browser can cache everything.\u00a0 But the N900 browser only has to\u00a0 cache the last two pages to beat the iPhone browser in that respect.<\/p>\n I’m not at Nokia World so I can’t actually do my own hands on testing of the N900.\u00a0 If any readers are there, please try loading a recent, but not current page, from history in the N900 browser and let us know if it’s instant.<\/p>\n <\/a> I really, really hope the N900 lives up to expectations.\u00a0 Nokia hasn’t had a game changing device since the N95.\u00a0 The N900 might just be the must be the winner that Nokia so desperately needs. Superior mobile browsing would do it provided the N900 also provides the basics like a usable keyboard, good RF performance, voice clarity, a fast, intuitive UI, all day battery life and enough RAM for effortless multitasking.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" At the Nokia World keynote today, Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvou (OPK) called the N900 the “best browser device ever”.\u00a0 Strong words and clearly aimed at the iPhone which is often said to have the best mobile browser. I’m really hoping that OPK is right as I don’t consider the iPhone’s browser all that great. It’s OK, with pretty good rendering and JavaScript support and it’s easy to use.\u00a0 I don’t even mind that it doesn’t support Flash, personally I wish … Continue reading
\n<\/a>At the Nokia World keynote today, Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvou (OPK) called the N900 the “best browser device ever”.\u00a0 Strong words and clearly aimed at the iPhone which is often said to have the best mobile browser.<\/p>\n
\nIt looks like the N900 is, as I expected it would be, the star of the show at Nokia World. The rest of the show announcements include a new Beta version of Ovi Maps<\/a>, a Beta Facebook client called Social Messaging<\/a>; both for S60 Series 5 only; the renaming of the Express Music<\/em><\/strong> line as the “X Series<\/strong><\/em>“; two new X Series\u00a0 phones, the Symbian X6<\/a> and the S40 slider X3<\/a> along with the the previously leaked N97 Mini<\/a> and\u00a0 Booklet netbook<\/a>. The X6 resembles a more stylish 5800 but with a very exciting difference, it has a capacitive screen, Nokia’s first.\u00a0 That’s great, capacitive technology, used by the iPhone and all current Android devices, is the state of the art in touch technology. Compared with the the resistive screens on the N900, N97 and 5800, capacitive screens are much more responsive, more readable in direct sunlight and make multitouch possible.\u00a0 It’s just\u00a0 too bad Nokia didn’t put a capacitive screen on the N900, I guess they have to save something for the N910!<\/p>\n