| 29th January - Skyfire unveiled
a new mobile browser that makes browsing on a smartphone just like browsing on
a PC. For the first time ever, smartphone users can experience the real
Web to access and interact with any Web site built with any Web technology,
including dynamic Flash, advanced Ajax, Java and more at the same speeds
they are accustomed to on their PC. With this free downloadable browser,
users can finally watch videos from the real YouTube, stay connected with their
friends on the full-feature PC versions of Facebook and MySpace, and listen to
any Web music service like Last.fm. Before Skyfire, users painfully waited for
these Flash and Ajax-heavy sites to render often resulting in error messages
or crashes. For too long consumers have been promised the real
Web on their phone, only to be disappointed by slow rendering, error messages,
no Flash support, watered down WAP pages or second-rate mobile versions of their
favorite site, said Skyfire CEO Nitin Bhandari. Skyfire has remedied
those ills at a speed not seen before on the mobile platform. By extending the
PC Web experience to smartphones, we fully expect Skyfire to fundamentally change
the way people use their phones. Users will not have to change their
Web behavior on their smartphones because Skyfire allows them to access the same
Web content, and interact with that content, exactly as they do on their PC. When
users load their favorite sites, they will not encounter unrecognizable content,
unfamiliar page layouts, or missing content, like they have with other mobile
browsers. To date, Skyfire is the fastest loading mobile browser on the market. Many
sophisticated technologies are launched at DEMO, and in my many years of hosting
the event, its the simple and elegant products like Skyfire which seem to
have the most staying power, said Chris Shipley, executive producer of the
DEMO conferences. Mobile browsing has not advanced at the same rate as other
mobile technologies, so I am delighted to see Skyfire bring a new product to market
which directly addresses one of the biggest pain points in the mobile experience
today. Skyfire has broken down the two primary barriers for Internet
adoption on smartphones speed and user experience. Recent studies point
to the demand for mobile content, but the browsing experience has hindered the
potential growth. As prices continue to drop, more users will adopt the full functionality
offered by smartphones. According to ABI Research, 115 million smartphones were
to be shipped in 2007, and that number will rise to 410 million by 2012. Skyfires
ability to support Flash video can give a shot in the arm to consumption of video
on smartphones which currently stands at 18.4 percent, said Seamus McAteer,
senior analyst, M:Metrics. Technologies that improve the user experience
of mobile applications will bolster the adoption of mobile media as it becomes
increasingly mainstream. Skyfire includes numerous features aimed
at simplifying the mobile browsing experience. For example, when a user conducts
a Web search from the home page, Skyfire pulls results from multiple search engines
and displays the results in multiple tabs that consumers can easily navigate.
In addition, users can bookmark specific locations on a Web page to get to the
content that matters most to them in one click such as stock quotes, sports
scores, blog messages, etc. Skyfires user interface features full screen
navigation, thumbnail views and zooming to seamlessly resize the Web content to
fit the mobile screen. Skyfire Technology Skyfires patent-pending
technology is the foundation of Skyfires unique ability to support all Web
technologies, both current and future, at speeds comparable to the PC. With Skyfires
proprietary technology, supporting any new Web standard becomes a seamless user
experience without the need to upgrade to new releases. This technology allows
Skyfire to support real Web browsing while saving precious bandwidth and reducing
processing power and memory needed on the phone. Private Beta Announced Skyfire
announced a private beta to support Windows Mobile phones, both touchscreen and
non-touchscreen, in the U.S.. The company will introduce a version for Symbian
smartphones in the coming months and other platforms and geographies are on the
product roadmap. Users can sign-up for the private beta by visiting www.skyfire.com. Skyfire
was founded by Bhandari and CTO Erik Swenson in April 2006, and has been in stealth
mode under the name DVC Labs until today. Based in Mountain View, Calif., the
team includes engineering veterans from Adobe, Creative, eBay, Extreme Networks,
MobiTV, Pinnacle, and Shutterfly. Back
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