• your Windows® embedded community

    eWEEK Windows for Devices - Your Windows Embedded Community

    Windows For Devices

  • home
  • news
  • embedded PCs
  • boards
  • handhelds
  • tablets
  • thin clients
  • enterprise
  • consumer
  • articles

    News

  • Home > News

        Browser to become tomorrow's mobile phone UI?

        Doug | Date: Mar 3, 2005 | Comments: 1



        • Print PDF
        • Filed Under: News

        Opera Software, France Telecom, and Orange are exploring ways to add a browser-like home screen to mobile phones, to improve usability and to make lucrative data services more accessible. "Platform," which is derived from Opera's mobile...


        browser technology, replaces the handset's normally idle homescreen. This makes creating a custom UI that combines typical phone operations with access to Web-based content as easy as designing a Web page, the companies say.

        Click here for larger image of Platform home screen)

        The intent, according to Opera, is to position profitable, value-added operator services closer to the end user. Information from the phone's internal applications, such as messaging and calendar, can also be easily integrated within the home screen, since the development process is just like building Web pages.

        Opera contends that mobile phone users repeatedly glance at their handsets -- even when not in use -- and especially just prior to performing tasks such as dialing. With Platform as the default screen, users will see updated online content and services whenever they check time, battery status, signal strength, new messages, missed calls, and other normal phone functions.

        The experimentation is currently being done on Microsoft's Windows Mobile Smartphone and Symbian's S60 software platforms, Opera told WindowsForDevices.com.



        Related stories:
        • Opera readies MS smartphone browser for production
        • Opera ports its smartphone web browser to Windows Mobile
        • Software eases Internet access from Windows Mobile devices
        • Mini-Mozilla meets Pocket PC
        • "Skweezing" the web into wireless handhelds
        • Motorola licenses multi-format browser for smartphones
        • Mobile browser gains accelerated webpage-rendering technology
      • Newsletter
      • RSS
      • Twitter
      • Got a Tip?
      • Linux Devices

    most read

    • ARM Windows 8 may nix desktop
    • Autonomous robot's built around a Windows Phone handset
    • Intel ships Cedar Trail Atoms
    • America's first 'WhiteFi' network goes live
    • Tiny module boots Windows Embedded Compact 7 in 800 milliseconds

      WfD showcase archives

      • Mobile Phones
      • PDAs and other handhelds
      • Netbooks
      • Windows tablets, UMPCs, and MIDs
      • Audio/video entertainment devices
      • Thin client terminals and devices
      • Voice over IP devices
      • SPOTlight on .NET Micro Framework (MF)
      • SPOT-light on Microsoft's "SPOT" Technology
      • Other smart devices

  • eWEEK Quick LInks
  • Home
  • Windows & Interoperability
  • Mobile & Wireless Technology
  • Application Development
  • Enterprise Applications
  • Enterprise Networking
  • Desktops & Notebooks
  • Technology Videos
  • ZDE Corporate Site
  • Linux for Devices
  • Microsoft Watch Blog
  • Migration Expert Zone
  • Smarter Technology
  • ASP Free
  • Scripts
  • Tutorialized
  • Technology Resource Library

Site Map

Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Copyright ©1996-2010 Ziff Davis Enterprise Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved. eWEEK and Spencer F. Katt are trademarks of Ziff Davis Enterprise Holdings, Inc.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Ziff Davis Enterprise Inc. is prohibited.