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Samsung’s Dolfin browser on the Wave bada phone is a good one\u00a0 in most respects. It loads pages quickly,\u00a0 has excellent JavaScript performance and supports geo-location and many HTML5 features. But I found it unusable with many desktop sites because the fonts are too small to read at the zoom level<\/a> where text columns fit the screen. When you zoom in text doesn’t reflow and you have to scroll horizontally to read which I find intolerable.<\/p>\n
Thanks to a reader comment<\/a>, I discovered that bada supports Java ME, which means you can use alternate browsers including Opera Mini, Bolt and the UC Browser. Java support is not mentioned in any of the bada promotional materials I’ve seen and most reviewers seem to have missed it’s existence as well. It’s not exactly a secret though.\u00a0 There’s a brief mention of Java in the “Games and Applications” section on page 71 of the Wave User Guide<\/a> (PDF). But who reads the manual? Not me, obviously.<\/p>\n
I tried several games and all installed and ran, but not all were playable. Some like Tibia ME<\/a> couldn’t connect, others including Rhynn<\/a> wouldn’t accept the QWERTY keyboard’s input so I couldn’t log in.\u00a0 The fit to screen option worked with some games but not others.\u00a0 The virtual keyboard’s soft keys and arrow keys(image, above right) generally worked well with games that don’t support touch.<\/p>\n
Samsung’s Dolfin browser on the Wave bada phone is a good one\u00a0 in most respects. It loads pages quickly,\u00a0 has excellent JavaScript performance and supports geo-location and many HTML5 features. But I found it unusable with many desktop sites because the fonts are too small to read at the zoom level where text columns fit the screen. When you zoom in text doesn’t reflow and you have to scroll horizontally to read which I find intolerable. Thanks to a reader … Continue reading