You really might consider using links -g for that. It's blazingly fast (speed is _only_ limitted by the connection!), needs nearby no ressources and it can save some traffic by turning pictures off. Opera Mini uses a kind of transparent proxy to compress the sites - it would be possible to create a own service for that. Some mobile providers offer similar services free of charge. A small problem is, that links lacks a touchscreen-friendly UI (however, it's still usable with a stylus or fingertip) and allows vertical scrolling for some sites.
In my honest opinion a iphone-browser is not the solution - it's a tribute to bad webdesign, nothing else. Desktop-like rendering and therefore needed zooming is exhausting and is leading rendering to the point auf absurdity. Rendering is used to make things fit - not to make them look the same whereever it's used. On 4/7/08, Erland Lewin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Will Opera Mini run on the Freerunner? > > I asked this before, but didn't get a reply. I assume it depends on > how well J2ME works on the Freerunner. > > IMHO, the Opera Mini design (compressing and optimizing web pages > before sending them to the phone) is excellent, because it saves > traffic (=money) and speeds up loading. > > I'm not aware of any open source alternative with the same design. > > A full-featured web browser is great for full AJAX sites, but I think > Opera Mini is sufficient for most web use. > > > /Erland > > > _______________________________________________ > Openmoko community mailing list > community@lists.openmoko.org > http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community >
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