Pushing a mouse cursor around on a mobile phone screen looks so much last century to me but it's great to see RIM hoping on the WebKit-train. It's the best one they could have taken and some better implementations/devices may follow very soon.
In short: It's a good day for RIM and for mobile web browsing in general.
HTML5 rules and I wish IE9 came out yesterday, with a companion named "subIE9killswitch". Being realistic, let's hope IE9 will at least sport some HTML5-capabilities, especially the video-tag and h.264 ... Afterwards only Mozilla would have to surrender in the pending question of video-format and HTML5's path to victory was free.
Following the commercial success (and technical disappointment) of the original Wildfire -- which featured a miserly 528MHz CPU and QVGA display -- HTC has returned with the Wildfire S.
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
Pushing a mouse cursor around on a mobile phone screen looks so much last century to me but it's great to see RIM hoping on the WebKit-train. It's the best one they could have taken and some better implementations/devices may follow very soon.
In short: It's a good day for RIM and for mobile web browsing in general.
HTML5 rules and I wish IE9 came out yesterday, with a companion named "subIE9killswitch". Being realistic, let's hope IE9 will at least sport some HTML5-capabilities, especially the video-tag and h.264 ... Afterwards only Mozilla would have to surrender in the pending question of video-format and HTML5's path to victory was free.