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I spoke with Opera Software co-founder Jon von Tetzchner at CTIA today. Yesterday Opera announced<\/a> that it had joined Adobe’s Open Screen Project,<\/em> which aims to increase the use of Flash on all devices including mobiles.\u00a0 I asked Jon what the alliance with Adobe would mean for Opera Users. He pointed out that Opera had long supported Flash in its desktop browsers, the Nintendo Wii browser and with Opera Mobile on Windows Mobile. He said that\u00a0 Open Screen Project membership will help Opera to improve the compatibility of its products with Flash and enhance the user experience.<\/p>\n
Jon talked a bit about Opera’s support for web standards. Opera is one of the founders of the WHATWG<\/a>, the group responsible for HTML5. It is a strong proponent of HTML5, CSS3 and SVG, believing that these technologies are turning the browser into a powerful runtime environment for webapps including games and animation. Jon said he is proud of the support Opera gives to the W3C and other standards bodies. Opera believes standards are a key to achieving it’s goal of the web on every device, everywhere.<\/p>\n
We also talked about Opera’s new mobile advertising platform, Open Mobile Ad Exchange<\/em> which was announced<\/a> earlier in the week. It can deliver ads to any mobile browser that supports JavaScript but is particularly aimed at publishers and advertisers who want to reach Opera Mini’s 65 million global users. The ads display in a participating publisher’s web page as with other ad networks and not<\/strong> in Opera Mini itself.<\/p>\n
Open Mobile Ad Exchange is open to publishers and advertisers of\u00a0 all sizes. Advertisers will be able to target particular regions, including hyper local targeting for local businesses.\u00a0 Device targetting is also available and ads are optimized to the device’s screen size and other capabilities. Publishers and advertisers can enroll in the program here<\/a>.<\/p>\n
I spoke with Opera Software co-founder Jon von Tetzchner at CTIA today. Yesterday Opera announced that it had joined Adobe’s Open Screen Project, which aims to increase the use of Flash on all devices including mobiles.\u00a0 I asked Jon what the alliance with Adobe would mean for Opera Users. He pointed out that Opera had long supported Flash in its desktop browsers, the Nintendo Wii browser and with Opera Mobile on Windows Mobile. He said that\u00a0 Open Screen Project membership … Continue reading