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April 3, 2009 10:32 AM PDT

The real deal behind Opera Mobile 'Turbo'

by Jessica Dolcourt
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Last week, when Opera Software announced Opera Mobile 9.7 for business partners, the Norwegian company also mentioned that a version for consumers would come "soon." At CTIA 2009, Opera told CNET that "soon" means May.

Opera Mobile 9.7 preview

Everything is the same but the rendering.

(Credit: Opera Software)

What sets Opera Mobile 9.7 apart from the current 9.5 beta version for Symbian and Windows Mobile phones is the inclusion of Opera Turbo, a rendering and compression engine that shrinks data down to 80 percent. What's more, the Turbo engine uses the exact same server engine as Opera Mini's, Opera's proxy browser for Java phones.

This is interesting. An effort to speed up Opera Mobile using Opera Mini's rendering servers means that the full-Web Opera Mobile was simply not fast enough for Opera's liking--or, perhaps just not as fast as some of the competition. Opera showed off side-by-side versions of Opera Mobile 9.7 in action, one with the Turbo feature on, the other with it off. Turbo-ized surfing was indeed much faster when squeezed through the server, though photo quality predictably took a hit. Yet if speed is what you're after--especially over shaky EV-DO, EDGE, or other 2.5G cellular networks--Turbo gives you options. Yet, does feel in one sense like Opera is taking a step back. Does this mean that Web surfers don't really want the full mobile Web, or that speed trumps all else?

As I mentioned, Opera Mobile 9.7 alpha is still a bit raw. For one thing, you have to manually turn the Turbo booster off in a buried advanced-options menu. Switching back and forth between Turbo and regular settings would be a pain for users who might easily forget. Why turn it off? The Turbo enhancement is terrible for AJAX-heavy Web pages like Google Maps and for streaming video, both of which require high image quality. Eventually, Opera says that the Opera Mobile browser will be able to autodetect the page type and switch Turbo on and off automatically, making the exchange seamless, though that may not happen by the time the beta is released to the public in May. Hopefully, it will be perfected when the general release drops, probably some months later.

Originally posted at CTIA show
Jessica Dolcourt reviews the latest and greatest smartphone apps, in addition to a healthy dose of Windows software. E-mail Jessica and follow her on Twitter.

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by tuneslover April 3, 2009 11:07 AM PDT
Nyc...now i'm looking forward for Symbian S60v5 version.
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by AndrewRich April 4, 2009 1:09 PM PDT
Still waiting for a final release of Opera Mobile 9.5. The beta was last updated October 20 of last year!
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by ktswami April 8, 2009 10:31 AM PDT
By the way, this very cool Turbo feature is available for Opera desktop now (Win, Mac, Linux). A new AUTO mode, speeds up rendering 4x, when the connection is slow, and turns OFF when it's fast on your wifi connection.

Also, Jessica, you're missing a HUGE justification for Opera Turbo. Mobile data plans (outside of iPhone/ATT in the US) are metered. Opera Turbo saves 4x data on your mobile data plan...

Opera keeps innovating.
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