{"id":514,"date":"2008-03-18T20:44:42","date_gmt":"2008-03-19T04:44:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=514"},"modified":"2020-09-28T11:53:27","modified_gmt":"2020-09-28T18:53:27","slug":"sprint-openweb-update","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/514\/","title":{"rendered":"Sprint OpenWeb Update"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’ve found out a little more about the OpenWeb <\/em>transcoder that US CDMA\/EVDO provider Sprint <\/em>is rolling out which I wrote about last week<\/a>. If you missed that piece, Sprint has added a transcoder from OpenWave called OpenWeb to at least some of their WAP gateways. The stated purpose of OpenWeb is to transform full web pages that wouldn’t be usable on handsets into something mobile friendly. The problem is that the OpenWeb software modifies the browser’s http headers, removing some and adding others which breaks many off-portal content (ringtone, wallpaper, game) delivery services. OpenWeb also transcodes many mobile websites that don’t need it, removing formatting, corrupting transparent GIF images and generally making the sites ugly and harder to use.<\/p>\n The main thing that’s happened since Friday is that Sprint, after launching this thing in stealth mode at least a couple weeks ago, has issued a press release<\/a> touting the product’s features and is also reaching out to mobile developers in this thread<\/a> on the Sprint Application Developer Portal<\/em> (ADP) forum.<\/p>\n The Sprint Forum thread contains a PDF<\/a> with some basic information about how the transcoder operates. If you have a mobile website you should read the document although I’m not sure how accurate it is.<\/p>\n The PDF suggests that the OpenWeb transcoder will not modify sites with urls matching the patterns *.mobi, m.*, wp.*, mobile.*, wireless.* <\/strong>and pda.*<\/strong> and that owners of mobile sites not matching those patterns<\/strong> should request that their sites be excluded by posting a request to the Sprint Developer Forum thread linked above. The document also claims that sites sending the cache-control no-transform<\/em> header will not be modified.<\/p>\n Exclusion by domain\/subdomain doesn’t seem to actually be working<\/strong>, especially for m.* and *.mobi sites. I found that m.wapreview.com and yeswap.mobi along with lots of other sites including find.mobi, taptu.mobi<\/strong> and even m.gmail.com<\/strong> are still being transcoded. Requesting that your site be excluded does seem to work though. I requested exclusion for yeswap.com and mini.opera.com last Friday and they are both coming through un-modified now. Forget about cache-control no-transform<\/em> though, yeswap.mobi and mp.wapreview.com both send it but get transformed anyway. I suggest that you submit a request for your sites even they are on *.mobi, m.*, etc. domains just to be sure.<\/p>\n Unless you have a Sprint handset there’s really no way to tell if your site’s being transcoded. If you do have a Sprint phone you can generally tell just by looking at the screen but if in doubt use the device’s Show URL browser menu command. If it starts with http:\/\/sprint.aopwv.com\/<\/strong> you are being transcoded.<\/p>\n Which raises an interesting point. Some US and English speaking international mobile developers have heard of the Sprint\/Openwave transcoding issue as it’s been picked up by MobHappy<\/a>, Mike Rowehl<\/a>, Jason Delport<\/a>, Semapedia.org<\/a> and RCR Wireless News<\/a>. But I’m sure that 100’s of thousands of mobile site owners and content providers around the world have no idea that Sprint is trampling on their content and that they have to register on Sprint’s developer portal and ask that their markup and headers be left alone. This sort of whitelisting is completely unscalable on the vast world wide<\/strong> (mobile) web<\/strong>. I encourage every mobile site owner to contact Sprint and request exclusion. If you have a blog and care about the open mobile web please put up a post and link to here and\/or one of the other sites that’s covering this issue. I’d love to see Sprint get swamped with thousands of exclusion requests. Maybe they would start to realize that what they are doing is a huge screw up.<\/p>\n It’s not clear if users can request that sites they use but don’t own be whitelisted<\/strong>. A Sprint representive quoted by RCR Wireless News seems to suggest they can;<\/p>\n “As we complete our rollout of the mobile Web enhancement, some sites optimized for mobile nay not be recognized as such, so we are providing customers<\/strong>\/developers the opportunity to request mobile-friendly sites be added to the exclusion list by going to the Sprint Application Developer Program Web site at http:\/\/developer.sprint.com and posting a request in the Wireless Web and Messaging forum…”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n But on developer.sprint.com users requesting exclusion are told;<\/p>\n “To expedite processing of registration requests, unless already provided as part of your ADP account registration, we’d appreciate your providing contact information to validate your authority to make ‘mobile-friendly site\/domain registration’ requests on behalf of the host\/domain owner.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Anyway, if there is a site that you use and do not own that’s impacted by OpenWeb, I suggest that you request it be excluded too, although what Sprint really should do is to make OpenWeb optional by providing a way for users to turn it off both site by site and globally.<\/p>\n According to Sprint, the OpenWave rollout is not complete with only about 40% of users being affected so far. The full network should be covered within 30 days so we aren’t seeing the full effect yet.<\/p>\n Many well known mobile sites are being transcoded by OpenWeb, including grandcentral.com\/mobile, mowser.com, skweezer.net, JumpTap.com, mippin.com, mdog.com<\/strong>, and ovi.nokia.com<\/strong>.<\/p>\n OpenWeb’s reformatting of sites is actually worse <\/strong>than I thought. Last week I wrote that it preserved most CSS styling including background colors, box borders and floats. Either something has changed or I was seeing some untranscoded sites without realizing it. OpenWeb seems to ignore external style sheets entirely<\/strong>. With internal styles, text-align:center<\/em> and possibly a few other CSS rules are applied. OpenWeb also displays transparent background GIF images with an ugly gray background<\/strong> so even very simple sites using a transparent GIF logo are effected.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" I’ve found out a little more about the OpenWeb transcoder that US CDMA\/EVDO provider Sprint is rolling out which I wrote about last week. If you missed that piece, Sprint has added a transcoder from OpenWave called OpenWeb to at least some of their WAP gateways. The stated purpose of OpenWeb is to transform full web pages that wouldn’t be usable on handsets into something mobile friendly. The problem is that the OpenWeb software modifies the browser’s http headers, removing … Continue reading