Reviews   ::        

Articles   ::        

Home   ::        

Links   ::        

Archives   ::        

Search   ::        

About Us   ::        
 
HDTV Costs     

HDTV Guide     

Diskeeper 9     

Stor n Go PRO     

Blade SSD Server     

 
      Cool banner #1
 
 

 
  Opera Addresses Browser Rendering Problems
 
  One thing that has contiuned to amaze me is how browsers seem to cut of the right side of a page when you go to print it. Now Opera Software says they've fixed that. Opera announced that they have solved the problem of rendering Web pages effectively regardless of screen size. Opera's new Extensible Rendering Architecture (ERA) removes the need for horizontal scrolling and improves ability to print entire Web pages. In combination with Opera's Zoom function, ERA also presents a compelling accessibility feature with which users can magnify Web pages dramatically and still view them without having to scroll sideways.

Opera's rendering technologies have previously included Small- and Medium-Screen Rendering (SSR/MSR) to render Web pages on mobile devices, as well as TV-rendering (TVR) for effectively displaying Web pages on regular television sets. ERA is the architecture that incorporates all of Opera's rendering technologies in one dynamic framework, and thus concludes Opera's effort to solve the rendering problem regardless of screen size.

The rendering challenge has been that most Web pages are designed with desktop or laptop users in mind, and are usually set to a fixed width of 800 pixels or more. Consequently, if your screen or window size is smaller than the minimum width of the Web page, you have to resort to horizontal scrolling. Opera's ERA technology enables dynamic resizing to adapt Web page content to fit any width - from projectors to mobile phones, and everything in between. Furthermore, printing Web pages will often leave out parts because the Web page is wider than the paper, and ERA can make the Web page fit the width of the paper for complete printouts.

"Opera's vision is to enable people to access their favorite Web sites on any device, and ERA means that users can have a great Internet experience on any screen regardless of a Web page's width, tables, or frames," says Jon S. von Tetzchner, CEO, Opera Software. "With its unlimited applicability, ERA technology is truly a milestone in Web page rendering."

Fit-to-Window will be an integrated feature of the next version of the Opera desktop browser, Opera 7.60. You can grab a preview of ERA by downloading the Opera 7.60 Technical Preview 3 the Opera forums under "Beta Testing."

 
      Posted by: Agitator!!, November 24, 2004, 7:15 am  

 
    Cool banner #1
 
 
       ::  USB News

       ::  Bjorn 3D

       ::  [H]ardOCP

       ::  BurnOutPC

       ::  I am Not a Geek

 
 
Shopping Search



Top Products


Processors

AMD

Intel

More...


Cases

Antec

Enlight

More...


Motherboards

Abit

Asus

Tyan

More...


Sound Cards

Creative Labs

Hercules

More...


Graphic Cards

ATI

nVidia

More...


Hard Drives

IBM

Maxtor

Quantum

More...


 

 

 
2001 - 2004 Digital Silence
Digital Silence is not responsible for the information or the accuracy of the information above.
All trademarks and copyrights owned by their respective companies.

Graphical Design by Mohsin Ali
Website Layout by Universal Interactive

PHP Programming by Network Innovations
Additional HTML Programming by Moddin.Net