{"id":881,"date":"2008-09-02T16:52:55","date_gmt":"2008-09-02T23:52:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=881"},"modified":"2009-05-25T09:48:58","modified_gmt":"2009-05-25T16:48:58","slug":"mobile-browser-test-ucweb6","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/881\/","title":{"rendered":"Mobile Browser Test – UCWEB6"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is the second in a series of posts comparing free add-on full-web mobile browsers.\u00a0 If you missed the first one, covering TeaShark vs. Opera Mini it’s here<\/a>.<\/p>\n Here’s a look at UCWEB, Version 6.\u00a0 This browser comes from\u00a0 Guangzhou Ucfly Company<\/em> in Guangzhou, China.\u00a0 I couldn’t find out much about this company other than what’s on their web page<\/a>. Ucfly has partnerships with China Mobile<\/em> and Chinese search engine Baidu<\/em>.\u00a0 According to the company, UCWEB has been downloaded 11 million times and averages 400 thousand daily users.<\/p>\n To be honest I wasn’t expecting much from this browser.\u00a0 The UCWEB website, at least the English version, is full of typos, not very well organized and the download instructions and online help (a short FAQ) are confusing and vague.<\/p>\n Once I actually installed the browser, I was pleasantly surprised<\/strong>.\u00a0 UCWEB is fast, stable and full of features. It’s a much better browser than TeaShark<\/em> and represents serious competition for Opera Mini,<\/em> something I never expected.<\/p>\n UCWEB6 has native versions for all three editions of Symbian S60, for Windows Mobile Standard and Professional 2003 and later and also two Java ME MIDP 2.0 versions; a standard 208 KB version and a 128 KB “lite” one for Nokia S40s and other phones with a low allowable jar file size.\u00a0 I tested the S60 3rd Edition native version on a N95-3 and the full Java version on both the N95 and a Motorola Z8<\/p>\n UCWEB, TeaShark and Opera Mini are all proxy based browsers.\u00a0 All traffic to and from the Web passes through a proxy server that parses and renders the page before compressing it for display\u00a0 by the thin client browser.\u00a0 Proxy based browsers have both advantages and disadvantages compared with direct browsers like Netfont, Opera Mobile and the embedded mobile browsers of most phones.<\/p>\n The biggest advantage of a proxy based approach is that the resource intensive work of rendering and reformatting pages and resizing images is done with the server’s fast CPU. Large complex pages that would overwhelm the capabilities of most phones can be efficiently handled. Types of content impossible to display on most phones;\u00a0 JavaScript, large format videos, Flash and PDF files, can be converted by the proxy into something the phone client can display. Because the transmitted file is compressed, data traffic (and cost to the user) is reduced significantly and pages load faster, especially on non-3G networks.<\/p>\n The main disadvantage of the proxy based approach is that it’s a potential security risk; all traffic passes through the proxy where an unscrupulous employee or hacker might be able to read it and harvest passwords, credit card numbers, etc. The risk is slight but real and I advise against using any proxy based browser to access sites that expose your financial information.<\/p>\n As I did in the Teashark vs Opera Mini comparison, I’m going to compare the three browsers in seven areas, features, performance, rendering accuracy, usability, compatibility with a variety of sites, compatibility with various phones<\/em><\/strong> and security<\/em><\/strong>.<\/p>\n Features <\/strong><\/p>\n Like Teashark, UCWEB has tabbed browsing<\/strong>. TeaShark is limited to just two tabs, but UCWEB allows up to 10.\u00a0 You can open any link on the current page in a new window,\u00a0 and switch instantly between windows with the ‘3’ key.\u00a0 You can also open an empty window and then launch a new url or bookmark in it.<\/p>\n The S60 Version of UCWEB has two view modes<\/strong>. “Zoom Mode<\/em>” is like TeaShark’s only mode or Opera mini’s “Desktop Mode”<\/em>, it displays a tiny map of the full web page as it would appear in a PC prowser and allows you to zoom in on any area.\u00a0 UCWEB’s other mode is called “Adaptive Mode<\/em>”\u00a0 and is the equivalent of Opera Mini’s fit-to-width “Mobile View<\/em>” – pages are reformatted to a single column and neither zooming or horizontal scrolling is required. The Java editions of UCWEB have only Adaptive Mode, there is no Zoom Mode.<\/p>\n The S60 3rd native edition can save the current page<\/strong> for later retrieval and offline browsing.\u00a0 Pages can be saved as a plain text file or in a proprietary UHTML format which preserves formatting. The Java versions don’t have the save page option.<\/p>\n UCWEB supports file downloads<\/strong>, including file types like .jar and .jad, that Opera Mini doesn’t allow you to download. You can also download any image from the current page.\u00a0 I initially had some problems with the download feature.\u00a0 On the N95 using the unsigned Java version, I was able to download only after answering a barrage of security prompts.\u00a0 Commenter jbpseudo pointed me to a signed Java Version.\u00a0 If you don’t see it on the download page, try overriding the browser detection by selecting a Sony Ericsson phone like the P900. With the signed version, I was able to turn off all the security prompts using the N95’s Application Manager.\u00a0 The signed version wouldn’t install on the Motorola Z8, however.<\/p>\n Using the\u00a0 native version every download initially failed with an “Error -18”. Fortunately, UCWEB has a useful File manager which shows the history of all download attempts and allows you to resume and restart downloads and rename downloaded files. By choosing “Restart” I was able to successfully complete all the failed downloads.<\/p>\n Bookmark management <\/strong>in UCWEB is more sophisticated than Opera Mini’s.\u00a0 Folders are supported and bookmarks can be imported and exported.\u00a0 The import\/export file is a simple delimited text file. It should\u00a0 be pretty easy to write a small program to synchronize the bookmarks with a desktop browser. Bookmark import\/export is not available in the Java Version.<\/p>\n <\/a>One of the best features of UCWEB is copy and paste<\/strong> support. Text can be copied from a web page, something no other mobile browser I’ve seen can do.\u00a0 You don’t get to select the text, the entire text contents of the page is placed in the phone’s system clipboard.\u00a0 But UCWEB lets you open and edit the contents of the clipboard to extract just the snippet of text you want.\u00a0 You can also copy the page’s URL or the URL of the selected image or link to the clipboard.<\/p>\n Features Winner: UCWEB<\/strong>, Opera Mini has a few features that UCWEB doesn’t, including an RSS reader and bookmarklet support.\u00a0 I never use Mini’s RSS reader as it doesn’t synchronize with anything and tends to lose track of\u00a0 feeds.\u00a0 I do use bookmarklets a lot, mainly to save pages to social bookmarking sites like delicious.com.\u00a0 With UCWEB I found a partial workaround for the lack of bookmarklet support.\u00a0 I copy the page I want to bokmark’s URL, open delicious.com in a second tab, switch tabs and paste the URL into Delicious’ “Save a Bookmark” form. Copy\/Paste and Tabs and the ability to download all file types makes UCWEB the features winner.<\/p>\n Performance <\/strong>I ran a speed test on all three browsers.\u00a0 Teashark again loaded the test page<\/a> the fastest, averaging 12 seconds. Opera Mini took 18 seconds and UCWEB 22 seconds.\u00a0 If you pay for data by the kilobyte, Opera Mini does the best job of compressing pages when using the highest quality image setting.\u00a0 But UCWEB uses the least data when the browsers are configured for the lowest quality images or images turned off completely.<\/p>\n