{"id":19599,"date":"2013-07-29T21:03:21","date_gmt":"2013-07-30T04:03:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.wapreview.com\/?p=19599"},"modified":"2013-07-29T21:03:21","modified_gmt":"2013-07-30T04:03:21","slug":"uc-browser-mini-8-6-for-android-reviewed","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/19599\/","title":{"rendered":"UC Browser Mini 8.6 For Android Reviewed"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"UC<\/a>\u00a0\"UC<\/a><\/p>\n

Earlier this month,\u00a0UCWeb Inc.<\/a>\u00a0released UC Browser Mini 8.6<\/a> for Android. It’s one of just two proxy browsers for Android, the other being Opera Mini.<\/p>\n

Proxy browsers parse, render and compress web pages before sending the compressed page to a thin client on the phone. The client decompresses and displays the page. The main advantage of proxy browsers is greatly reduced data consumption. A good proxy browser can reduce the amount of data transmitted while browsing by up to 90%.\u00a0 Page loading speed is also improved on slow networks because so much less data is sent through the slow pipe. \u00a0The trade off is that because JavaScript is executed on the server rather than in the browser client, there’s limited JavaScript support, in particular, event driven changes to a loaded page are either broken or slow and clunky because they require a server round trip and a page reload.<\/p>\n

This version of UC Browser Mini seems like a relatively minor update to the previous 8.0 release which I reviewed<\/a> in October. The main changes seem to be:<\/p>\n