To say thatWindows Mobileweb browsers are hard to use would be equivalent to saying sister are fairly easy to exhaust up . Microsoft ’s trying to remedy this with their experimental Deepfish World Wide Web web browser app , which try out to give you screen background - course of study rendering on your WM smartphone . Does it work ? Well , sorta .
Watch the picture and tally the jump for our impressions .
It ’s honest that the whole setup look quite nice . By taking a snap of a web page on the waiter side and sending the persona to your phone , you get right rendering without a lot of CPU use . The downside to this is that dynamical pages , javascript , flash , and other vane cash advance since Netscape 1.0 are n’t tolerate .

Other queerness are that it ’s quite bandwidth laborious and dense if you ’re on a penny-pinching pipe . Whenever you soar upwards in , the zoomed - in eminent quality has to be download from the server . Not too bad , but it does slow up down the web crop experience .
Scrolling is n’t bad on myCingular 8525 , but it ’s nothing to brag about . There are noticeable wait and the page really cuts off a certain space down the Thomas Nelson Page . We ’re not sure what ’s snuff it on here .
So all in all , it ’s a dainty start for an experimental web browser . Sure , there are kink to be work out , but in the meantime you’re able to actually get desktop - quality HTML rendering on your WM smartphone . Other phones like theiPhoneand certain Series 60 phones support similar range features as well . We ’ll have to put the three together and see who wins .

Project Page[Deepfish ]
cellphonesMicrosoftsoftwareWindows MobileWindows Mobile 6
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