-
-
-
- Save on Prepaid Refills

Get 10% Off AT&T Go Phone refills at CallingMart.com with Coupon Code: mom1310
Get 7% Off Net10, TracFone & Verizon refills (Net10 family plans excluded) at CallingMart.com with Coupon Code: mom137
Get 5% Off Pageplus, Simple Mobile, H2O, Cricket, Red Pocket and Airvoice refills at CallingMart.com with Coupon Code: mom135
3% off most other refills with Coupon Code: ca3p-1207.
Codes good NOW through Tue 6/04/13. All codes require a minimum purchase of $18.
Tag Archives: Lumia920
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 4 The IE10 Mobile Browser
For me, the browser is the most used and most important app on any phone. Browsers have traditionally been a weak spot on Microsoft's mobile platforms. But Windows Phone 8 is supposed to fix that with a brand new browser based on the core of Internet Explorer 10 on the desktop. According to Microsoft, the new mobile browser, Internet Explorer 10 Mobile is supposed be a thoroughly modern browser with a fast JavaScript engine and excellent support for Web standards including a large set of HTML5 features. Does the browser on Windows Phone deliver? Here's my take after spending a couple of weeks with IE 10 Mobile on a Nokia Lumia 920.
User Interface
The browser has a rather sparse UI. The only browser chrome is a bottom address bar (image top, left). The bar has three controls on it, a single button that defaults to stop/refresh but can reconfigured as a favorites or tabs button, a combined address/search field and a three dots menu button.
The menu button opens a scrolling half screen menu (images top, center and right).
The Share Page menu item lets you post the current page's URL and title to Twitter or Facebook or share it by email or send it to another Windows Phone 8 device using NFC. Unlike Android, WP8 doesn't let 3rd-party apps extend sharing to other services. However, the browser does support JavaScript bookmarkets, a much underrated and very flexible way to pass page meta-data such as URL and title to all sorts of services like Google Translate, Pinboard, or Google Reader or to run JavaScript code on the page to clear domain cookies, change unreadable color combinations and much more.
The Settings menu option opens a full screen menu (image below, left) which lets you clear history and customize the address button. It also lets you change the browser's user-agent header to impersonate a desktop browser. That's essential for certain brain dead sites that force you to a mobile version that's hopelessly dumbed down. Here are the user agents that IE10 sends for the desktop and mobile options:
Mobile: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 10.0; Windows Phone 8.0; Trident/6.0; IEMobile/10.0; ARM; Touch; NOKIA; Lumia 920)
Desktop: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 10.0; Windows NT 6.2; Trident/6.0; ARM; Touch; WPDesktop)
The "advanced settings" button at the bottom of the settings screen brings up a scrolling menu (images below, center and right) which lets you enable auto-complete, change the default search provider from Bing to Google and adjust security settings including the "do not track" toggle, which defaults to sending a do not track header .
The IE10 user interface is pretty good overall but there are a few elements of the UI that I don't care for. My number one pet peeve is that there's no "forward" button or menu item. I often find myself switching forward and back between two related pages. With no forward control, IE10 makes me go into browser history, called "Recent" in IE10, to find the page I want.
I also don't like that the bottom address bar can't be hidden for full screen browsing and that it only has three controls on it. I'd like to see the Refresh/Stop embedded in the address field itself. That would allow it to coexist with the favorites or tabs button.
Performance
I was favorably impressed by the performace of the browser, it feels fast and renders the vast majority of sites very well. Opening multiple tabs doesn't seem to slow it down at all and switching tabs is nearly instantaneous.
Scrolling is smooth. I like that when scrolling vertically on a wide desktop page the browser holds it's horizontal position, keeping the current column of text centered rather than skewing to one side as Opera and Firefox Mobile tend to do. But there doesn't seem to be much in the way of momentum or flick scrolling in IE10. It takes a lot of "flicks" to go from the top of a long page to the bottom. As site navigation controls are almost always at the top and/or bottom of the page, I wish there was a quicker way to get to them.
Site Compatibility
The browser handled most sites and Web apps very well with proper rendering and few issues with interactive elements. It has much better HTML5 support than any previous Microsoft mobile browser with newly added implementations of the Application Cache, IndexedDB, WebWorkers WebSockets, CSS Regions and a subset of HTML5 form elements. IE10 Mobile scores a very respectable 320 points on HTML5Test.com. A good demonstration of IE10 Mobile's newfound HTML5 and CSS3 support and JavaScript preformance is the coolappse.com demo webapp (image above, left) whose animations work in IE10 Mobile and Safari but not in any Android Browser including Chrome.
When I moved from synthetic benchmarks and demo webapps to real world Web browsing the WP8 browser proved very capable. Virtually all the desktop and mobile sites I tried rendered accurately and were fully usable in IE10 Mobile. The exceptions revealed a couple of areas where the browser could stand improvement, namely text wrapping and hover navigation.
The problem with text is that, as far as I could tell, IE10 doesn't resize and reflow text to insure that it's a readable size. Thanks to the Lumia 920's large screen and high pixel density text on most sites is readable even for my 69 year old eyes. But a few sites, like the XDA-Developer forums (image above center ) that combine a small front and a wide fixed column width were unreadable for me. I don't have this problem with Opera Mobile or the Android browser. With those browsers, when you use pinch zooming to make text larger, the text re-flows and re-wraps to fit screen width. That feature would be a great addition to IE Mobile.
Hover navigation is an outdated design technique where links are hidden until you move the mouse pointer over them. On a touchscreen device, there's no mouse, no mouse pointer and thus no way to make hover links visible. Unfortunately quite a few sites still use hover navigation including WordPress which uses them extensively in its Dashboard which is where bloggers edit posts and moderate comments. Fortunately most touchscreen browsers now make hover links visible at all times. Mobile IE10 does not and that makes many common actions in WordPress like opening a comment for editing harder than they need to be.
Although Mobile IE10 is capable of handling advanced mobile Webapps, a number of sites are serving it "least common denominator" content intended to be usable in legacy feature phone browsers. Offenders include Twitter (image above, right) and Google. Google is rather inconsistent, IE10 Mobile gets the best iPhone/Android versions of Google Reader (image below, left) and YouTube but the basic versions of Gmail and Google Calendar. It's possible to force Google to show the versions of Gmail and Calendar that it serves to Android devices by using the URLs mail.google.com/mail/u/0/x/gdlakb-/gp/ for Gmail and www.google.com/calendar/gp for Calendar. Perhaps the strangest and most maddening example of a site underestimating the capabilities of Mobile IE10 is what happens when you try to use Google Search with IE10's "Desktop" user-agent. Google returns pages "adapted for your browser" by the circa 2006 Google Web Transcoder (images below center and right). The results would be funny if they weren't so unusable.
Conclusions
Internet Explorer 10 for Windows Phone 8 is a fast, Web standards compliant browser with good usability that works well with the vast majority of modern Webapps. There are are a couple of areas that could stand some fine tuning by Windows Phone finally has a browser that users and Web designers won't curse and Microsoft's developers can be proud of.
Related Posts
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 1: First Impressions and Google Apps Integration
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 2: Using Dropbox With Windows Phone 8
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 3: Transferring Files Between Windows Phone 8 and Ubuntu
Thanks to @nokia_connects for providing me with the trial Nokia Lumia 920 that made this post possible.
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 3: Transferring Files Between Windows Phone 8 and Ubuntu
@Nokia_Connects has loaned me a Nokia Lumia 920 to try out. This is the first time I've used a Windows Phone device for more than a few minutes. The Lumia runs Windows Phone 8 While there are a few things I don't like about WP8, I'm enjoying the overall user experience. It's refreshingly different than anything else and fast, fluid and, for the most part, very intuitive.
As a Linux user I wondered if it would be possible to connect the Lumia with my Ubuntu laptop and transfer photos, music, videos and documents back and forth.
Like Android 3.0 and later, Windows Phone 8 uses MTP (media transfer protocol) rather than USB mass storage for interfacing with a device's internal Flash storage, and with the SD card if the device uses one (the Lumia doesn't.)
At one time their were some issues with MTP support in Linux, but they seem to be mostly fixed. At least when when connect my Nexus S phone running Android 4.1 to my PC running the ancient, but still supported, Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, a Nautilus file explorer window pops up showing the phone's internal "memory card" and I can copy files back and forth between PC and phone. If I drop music files or videos anywhere in the Android phone's drive, the Android Media player finds and plays them with no issues. So it should "just work" with Windows Phone too, right? Well, yes and no.
When I connected the Lumia to my Ubuntu Linux box with a USB cable, as expected, Linux recognized the Lumia as an MPT storage device and opened a Nautilus window displaying the phone's pictures, documents, music, ringtones and videos folders (image, above). That looked promising so I tried copying various types of files to and from what seemed like the appropriate folders. The results were mixed.
Here's what worked:
- Images and Videos, Phone to PC: I could open my photos and videos on the phone using the Gnome image viewer or VLC Player and I could copy them to a folder on the PC.
- Ringtones: Full track .mp3 (but not .m4a) songs copied into the phone's Ringtones folder could be used as ringtones.
- Documents: Text files and Microsoft Office documents that had been saved with Microsoft Office and copied into the phone's Documents folder could be opened with the phone's Office app.
- PDFs copied to the phones's Documents folder could be opened using the free Microsoft PDF Viewer from the Windows Store.
Here's what doesn't work:
- Images, PC to Phone: Copying .jpeg or .png images to the phone's picture folder or any of its subfolders has problems. The copy seem to work, the phone could be disconnected, power-cycled and re-connected and the files were still on the phone. However the images were not not visible in the phone's Photos Hub gallery.
- Videos and Music, PC to phone: Videos or music files copied to their respective folders were not recognized by the WP8 Music and Video Hub media player either.
- Documents: If I created a document or spreadsheet with Libre Office or Open Office and saved in MS Office format, it could not be opened with the Office app, which claimed the document was corrupt! Office 2007 on Windows XP and Google Docs opened the "corrupt" files with no complaint.
I was able to find workarounds for all the problem file types:
- Video files, PC to Phone: Use Bluetooth. Videos in .mp4, .3gp, and 3g2 formats played on the phone when sent with Bluetooth. They could be found in the Photo Hub's Saved Pictures album and replayed from there. Videos in .ogv, webm, .avi or .mov formats that I tried failed to play.
- Music, PC to phone: Use Qlix (image, below), a small app intended to transfer music to Media Transfer Protocol (MTP) devices like the Microsoft's Zune. It's a bit primitive, you can't transfer whole folders of music in a single operation although you can multi-select files in a single folder for transfer, but it works and preserves song titles, artist and album names and cover art. Sending music to the phone with Bluetooth also sort of works. The tracks I sent played and were saved the Music & Videos Hub. But even thought files had ID3v1 tags with artist, album and title information, they where saved on the phone with the filename as the song title (Blue Highway.M4A for example) and with Unknown as the artist and track. There doesn't seem to be any way to edit the title on the phone or add the artist and album name either.
- Libre Office and Open Office Documents: Convert with Google Drive. Office on the phone complains that documents saved in MS Office format by Libre Office or Open Office are corrupt. But if you upload the documents to Google Drive in either MS Doc format or native ODF format and then download them from Drive in Office format, Office on the phone can open them.
It's all a bit kludgy, but by using a combination of USB, Bluetooth and Qlix I can move documents, music, photos, videos, and ringtones between my phone and computer. Which is as much as you can do with Microsoft's Windows Phone app for Windows 7 and 8 and apparently more than you can with a Mac.
Related Posts
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 1: First Impressions and Google Apps Integration
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 2: Using Dropbox With Windows Phone 8
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 4 The IE10 Mobile Browser
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 2: Using Dropbox With Windows Phone 8
I don't use cloud file storage services much, but I do use Dropbox for online note taking on all the platforms (Linux, Android, Symbian) I use. The notes are just plain text files containing things I want to remember and have available everywhere like; family member's clothing sizes for gift shopping, GSM hash codes, frequent flier numbers, train schedules, tech tips, etc. I create and update the notes with a text editor; gedit on Linux, redak on Symbian and Text Edit or the built in editor in the Dropbox app on Android.
I've been taking notes on my mobile devices since my Palm Pilot days. Initially I used Palm Memos, then Zaurus Memos, then Symbian Notes. I currently have hundreds of these notes, some over 10 years old.
Migrating notes from one proprietary platform to the next was always painful and time consuming. So I recently converted all my notes into plain text files and organized them by category in Dropbox folders, which I believe that's a future proof solution. If Dropbox goes away I can copy my local folders of text files to a different cloud storage system or even my FTP server.
I prefer Dropbox over other cloud services because it has robust clients for the three platforms that I use. On Android and Linux I use Dropbox's own clients and on my Nokia N8 I use Cutebox, a very good 3rd party client for Symbian Belle (I still carry my Nokia N8 quite a bit, especially when I plan to do some photography). The apps on all three platforms let me store local copies of my notes, so I'm not dependent on having connectivity to be able look something up.
I like to be able to use Dropbox on Windows Phone like I do other platforms, by keeping a copy of my Dropbox notes in a file system folder where I could open them with any text editor or other compatible app. But Windows Phone doesn't have a user accessible file system so that's not possible. However each Windows Phone app does get read/write access to it's own sandboxed area of the filesystem so a Windows Phone Dropbox app should at least be able to able to:
- Download a text file note from Dropbox for viewing an or editing with a built in editor.
- Save a local copy of the note so it's available offline and I don't have to waste time and bandwidth re-downloading the file every time I want to view it.
- If the file is edited on the phone, allow the updated file to be uploaded to Dropbox.
- Support creating new plain text notes on the phone and uploading them to Dropbox.
On iOS, which I don't use but which has a sandboxed file system similar to WP8, the official Dropbox app appears to be able to do everything I want. There's no official Dropbox app for Windows Phone, but there are about a dozen third party Windows Phone Dropbox apps. Surely, I though, one of them could meet my needs Well, I looked at all of them and not one really does what I want.
The Windows Phone Dropbox app that comes closest to meeting my needs is BoxShot ($1.29, also available as a free ad supported app with slightly reduced functionality). It lets me view and edit the text files in my Dropbox using a built in editor (image above, center) and create new text notes and upload them to Dropbox. The only thing missing is that it doesn't let me to save a local copy of a note.
BoxShot has a lot of other features besides the ability view and edit Drop text files. The free version can search for files in your Dropbox, upload photos to Dropbox from the Gallery or camera, rename or delete Dropbox files and folders and move or copy files between Dropbox folders. The paid version does all that plus it removes the ads, adds the ability to automatically sync one or more photo folders to Dropbox and has a Live Tile (image below, center) that displays your Dropbox quota and free space.
Besides lacking the ability to save a Dropbox file locally there are a couple of other BoxShot features that could work better. The search shows you files whose names match the search string, but taping the filename just opens the folder the file is in rather than the file itself. Photo folder syncing is great, and unlike uploading with the Gallery's built-in Skydrive uploading, photos are uploaded in their original size. But I wish there were an option to restrict automatic uploading to Wi-Fi only so I don't burn through my limited mobile data allocation uploading high resolution images.
Interesting, there's a free Google Drive Windows Phone app called GDocs that does everything I need including saving a local copy of every file you view or edit (image below, right). I'd move all my notes over to Google Drive except that I haven't found any good Symbian or Linux clients for Google Drive.
Related Posts
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 1: First Impressions and Google Apps Integration
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 3: Transferring Files Between Windows Phone 8 and Ubuntu
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 4 The IE10 Mobile Browser
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 1: First Impressions and Google Apps Integration
@Nokia_Connects has loaned me a Nokia Lumia 920 to try out for a couple weeks. Here are my initial impressions. Warning, I'm not a Windows user. My desktop OS in Ubuntu Linux and I use an Android phone. But I was curious to try the Lumia to see what Windows Phone 8 was like and whether I could use it productively without a Windows PC.
Physically the Lumia 920 looks a lot like a larger version of the N9 or Lumia 900. The screen even curves down into the sides of the body like the N9. My Lumia is white and the hard polycarbonate body has a smooth polished surface that looks great. It looks slippery but it's not. The smoothly rounded sides fit securely and comfortably between the palm of my hand and my curved fingers and I never felt in any danger of dropping the phone.
The Lumia 920 has a minimum of exterior ports and buttons. There's a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and slide out micro-SIM tray on top and a micro-USB charging and connectivity port on the bottom. There's nothing on the left side. The right side has three buttons: top to bottom they are the volume rocker, power-lock/un-lock button and a dedicated camera button. Except for the slide out SIM tray there are no visible seams or gaps any where on the phone. The 2000 mAh battery is not user replaceable and the Lumia, which has 32 GB of internal storage memory, doesn't support memory cards.
The Lumia's 4.5 inch 1280 x 768 px IPS screen is one the best I've seen on any phone. Blacks are really black and whites are pure and bright. Colors are well saturated and accurate. The screen has a wide viewing angle, colors and detail hold up well when viewing the screen at an angle. The screen also performs really well in bright sunlight. The phone really cranks up the brightness in bright situationsand there seems to be some sort of very effective anti-reflective coating at work as well.
As I mentioned I don't use any Microsoft software or hardware. Until I got the Lumia I'd only spent a few minutes playing with Windows Phone. I expected to hate the Windows Phone OS but ended up enjoying the experience for the most part. High points were the the OS' stability and the responsiveness of the user interface. Transitions between screens and apps are very snappy and animations are buttery smooth.
The Windows Phone 8 user interface is refreshing different from Android, Symbian, iOS or anything else. The main UI element is the Live Tile, which can be a shortcut to an app or file or an animated widget displaying things like the current weather, upcoming calendar events or a slideshow of photos from your gallery. Tiles can be moved and every tile can be re-sized to fit into a 1x1, 4x4 and 4x8 matrix. Although the interface is different then anything I was used to, it has the apparent simplicity and intuitiveness that are the mark of good user interface design. I was able to get up to speed with the basics of calling, messaging, email and the camera in just a few minutes without needing to look at the 16 page quick start guide, which is the only documentation packed with the phone.
I'm a T-Mobile user and the loaner Lumia was locked to AT&T. I'm using a SIM from Red Pocket Mobile, an AT&T prepaid MVNO. Red Pocket uses different APNs than AT&T for data and MMS. Both APNs use a proxy. Unlike with WP7, iOS and Symbian Belle, all of which hide or disable the MMS APN, I was a able to easily enter all the required settings.
AT&T doesn't allow their pay as you go or MVNO customers to use their LTE network so I couldn't test the Lumia's LTE speeds. Using HSPA+, the Lumia 920 generally achieved data speeds of a little better than 6 Mbps down and 1 Mbps up.
In contrast to the openness of its APN settings, just about everything else about Windows Phone seems tightly locked down. Unlike with Android or Symbian the only way to install apps is through the Windows Store. There's no side loading and there aren't any alternate app stores. There's also very limited access to the phone's file system. There is no pre-installed file explorer and none is available in the Windows Store. Third party apps can create and save files in their own private area of the file system but the only way to share files between apps seems with SkyDrive or other cloud storage.
I have Outlook.com and Skydrive accounts but don't really use them. Cloud services I do use include Dropbox, Gmail and Google Contacts and Calendar. I expected some issues connecting the Lumia with those cloud services but it went better than I expected with Gmail and Google Calendar and Contacts. I was able setup my Google account on the Lumia relatively easily. Here's the drill:
- Go to Settings > email + accounts > add an account > advanced setup
- Enter your full Gmail address and password when prompted and then hit Next
- Click Exchange Active Sync
- On the next screen enter m.google.com in the Server box. Leave Domain blank
- Press sign in and you are done.
In less than a minute I had all my email, contacts and calendar on my Lumia with real time push sync. It works great and the WP8 Email app does a decent job with Gmail.
Unfortunately, Google is shutting down their Exchange service to new users on January 30, 2012. Current users will be able to keep using Exchange on their current device, but after Jan. 30 new Windows Phone users will not be able to sync Google Calendar and Contacts. Gmail will still sync if you set it up as an IMAP account but it will use polling rather than push.
So far I haven't had much luck using Dropbox with Windows phone. There are a bunch of Dropbox apps in the Window store. I've tried a couple and they sort of worked but not well enough to really be useful to me. I think my requirements for a Dropbox app are simple:
- The ability to download any file from Dropbox, save it on the phone and let me open it with the phone's default app for that file type; Office for text files, Gallery for images and Media Player for music and videos.
- For plain text files, regardless of their I file extension (.html, .css, .js, .php, etc.) I need to be able to edit the local copy and save the changes back to Dropbox.
Hopefully I'll find a Dropbox app that will let me do what I want. If you know of one please let me know in a comment.
Related Posts
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 2: Using Dropbox With Windows Phone 8
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 3: Transferring Files Between Windows Phone 8 and Ubuntu
A Linux User's Nokia Lumia 920 Review - Part 4 The IE10 Mobile Browser




















