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Opera Signs Nokia Phone Deal

Masq666 writes "Opera Software stated on Friday that it had signed a deal with Nokia to put its mobile Internet browser on several Nokia phones. Opera has licensed its mobile Internet browser for a total of 11 Nokia phone models in recent years. Opera's CFO said he expected the rise in the number of phones with Opera's browser to outpace the increase in models."

14 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. Re:please no adds by chrisopherpace · · Score: 2, Informative

    Why do you say it has to run on CE? Opera does have a port for Linux you know....

  2. Re:please no adds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Opera runs fine on SymbianOS phones, like the Nokia 60 series.

  3. Re:please no adds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    well, I have the Nokia 9500 http://www.nokia.com/phones/9500, which is Symbian OS 7 based, Opera is indeed the default browser, and there are no Ads, hence, the license deal.

  4. There is no ad-version by geo.georgi · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are no ads on the mobile version of the browser.
    Only a trial version and it costs 20$ if you want to buy it.

  5. Re:It Figures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    please point out where opera sells antispyware programs. when you are done with that, please explain how nokia or opera allows spyware on their phones to begin with. oh wait, they don't. why? because you are full of shit.

    opera sells 1 thing. a browser. a browser that happens to work amazingly well, and even more amazingly well in a mobile environment.

    is this worth paying for? definitely.

    are you still full of shit? definitely.

  6. I used it and early MS phones by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2, Informative
    Lets just say that it was a two horse race, Opera vs IE and Opera won 1st and 2nd and 3rd place. IE was towed to the pet food factory.

    Opera works well and is a proper browser. IE at the time (about 2 years ago) was horribly limited in the mobile version, no css at all for instance. Opera on the other hand could handle regular websites as well or as bad as the full version on your pc.

    Mouse gestures didn't exist but the ones I used were the big slightly laptop form nokia's vs pda MS phones. The widescreen of the nokia helped reading newssites wich is what I was supposed to be building for these phones.

    Maybe IE has now improved but two years ago there was no competition.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  7. Re:Yep by Rits · · Score: 3, Informative

    Opera comes pre-installed or on a complimentary CD on some phones, including some Nokia models. And that is what this deal is about. You don't need a deal with Nokia for offering a third-party shareware program...

    See here for the list of current phones where you can either install Opera, or where it is pre-installed.

    --
    If you don't like having choices made for you, you should start making your own. - Neal Stephenson
  8. Re:Can anyone comment on the usability... by Wild+Bill+TX · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's not a CSS hack at all. Each page can have a different CSS for each different type of media, including screen, handheld, print, and more. It's up to your browser to decide which one to use.

    In the case of a mobile Opera browser, it will use your page's handheld CSS, if it exists. If it does not exist, the way page elements are displayed is simply altered to the default. For example, table cells are all displayed in one column.

    This is the way HTML is designed and meant to be. Pages should use a semantic structure, with elements such as <h1>, <p>, and so forth, leaving the way it's displayed up to the browser or a CSS file (separate presentation from content). Unfortunately, that's not the way most pages are written today, due to failing standards support on the part of Internet Exploiter and lack of willingness to adopt unfamiliar ways, so there's usually only one optimal presentation: your desktop's browser. For those pages, Opera's SSR simply does the best it can.

  9. Re:Opera? by LPetrazickis · · Score: 3, Informative

    Small Screen Rendering is available from the view menu in any recent version of Opera, including Opera 8b3 (Linux). It's surprisingly nifty, though kinda useless on the desktop.

    OTOH, the new "Fit to Window Width" feature is super useful whenever there's a horizontal sidebar or if you want to collapse a frameset into a single page.:)

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  10. Re:please no adds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    What do you mean "port"? It seems to me (from the large list of compatible OSes) that Opera was built to be cross-OS capabile from the ground up in the latest versions. The list (in case you were intersted):
    • Windows
    • Solaris Sparc
    • QNX
    • OS/2
    • MacOS
    • Linux Sparc
    • Linux PowerPC
    • Linux i386
    • FreeBSD i386
    • BeOS
  11. Re:Can anyone comment on the usability... by Rits · · Score: 2, Informative

    Daniel Glazman claims his CSS can do the same for Minimo as Opera's SSR for massaging webpages into something that fits in a 160 pixel wide screen.

    But Opera does much more than applying some styles. See here for the brochure.

    --
    If you don't like having choices made for you, you should start making your own. - Neal Stephenson
  12. Re:Can anyone comment on the usability... by SilicaiMan · · Score: 3, Informative

    Press shift-F11 and you'll see for yourself.

  13. Re:Yep by DaAdder · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually Opera Software AS is a Norwegian company, Nokia however is Finnish as you say.

  14. Re:please no adds by Bronz · · Score: 2, Informative

    Opera doesn't run on CE. If would be the symbian OS, as in the past: http://www.opera.com/download/index.dml?platform=s ymbian