Cellphone Browsing the Internet
Nowadays, people do not have to stay in the office or at home to check their e-mails. All they have to do is to switch on their BlackBerry’s and voila! They can read their co-worker’s latest office shenanigans or detailed instructions from their boss. They can even delete spam mails or reply to that long-awaited invitation for a date from the copy machine operator.
More than that, the latest mobile Web technologies have made it possible for users to update their MySpace profiles, or send instant messages on Yahoo, as well as check their favorite Web sites and read their RSS subscriptions, on the go. If that’s not enough, they no longer have to look behind their backs to play Solitaire on their PCs, as the game and other Java games are installed on their mobile phones, or they could point their phone browsers to gaming sites.
Mobile Web has increasingly lived up to its name. Taking the Web out of the confines of computers, ISPs and laptops into a new platform to fully exploit the handiness and mobility of mobile phones.
With the advent of Wi-Fi and the launch of Wi-Fi-enabled smartphones, even the prohibitive cost of accessing one’s operator’s GPRS, HSDPA, or UMTS networks will be eradicated. Instead, mobile Web users can take advantage of free access using one of the many public Wi-Fi hotspots. The increase in users will pave the way for more and more developers going into mobile Web development. Even now, even Google, the traditional Web giant, is taking notice of mobile Web and has since introduced Android, a mobile Web browser.
Indeed, mobile Web will become faster and more secure in the future, ushering in more applications that one can take to the road. It won’t be long before mobile Web will be at par with desktop Web.
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jave games are so cool eventhough they do not have fancy graphics.-:”
playing Java games has been my past time these days.;.