Hi Roland,

congratulations on your new browser!

a small tip:
a good way to test your browser would be of course to give a series 60 phone with this browser to the people of the webkit and kde QA teams :)

Kind regards,

Joost de Valk

@: joost@joostdevalk.nl
W: http://www.joostdevalk.nl

On Nov 2, 2005, at 10:22 AM, <roland.geisler@nokia.com> <roland.geisler@nokia.com> wrote:

Hi,


I am at the moment sitting in Barcelona at Nokia Mobility Conference

2005 where in a few minutes our new Web Browser for S60 will be

announced. I wanted to take this opportunity to again thank the KDE

community and the Apple Safari team for having built the Konqueror and

Safari browser, and for your enjoyable collaboration with our team over

the past months.


It has been a fascinating year for us here at Nokia to develop our new

Web Browser for S60. Building a new product is always exciting and

challenging at the same time. Bringing the full Web to mobile devices is

a bold goal. We think our new browser will make mobile Web browsing

fast, intuitive, and more enjoyable for both consumers and enterprise

users, bringing us a big step closer to this goal.


WebCore/KHTML and JavaScriptCore/KJS are now integral parts of our new

browser architecture, and the excellent Web compliance, small size and

performance have already impressed our customers. We have also built a

couple of cool new features that will make full Web browsing on mobile

devices easier and more fun - more information will be available on

S60.com and forum.nokia.com pages later today.


We think these are truly exciting times for Web browsing on mobile

devices. Some of our S60 smartphone studies at Nokia indicate that

browsing is already today generating over 60% of mobile data traffic,

and improved network performance of WCDMA/3G more than doubles the

browser usage compared to GPRS/EDGE. We believe that a browser that is

built on open source components can offer top performance,

interoperability and innovative features, and we are excited to work

together with you on this.


Our relationship with KDE community members and the Apple Safari team

over the past months has been in particular rewarding for us at Nokia;

we had a great time presenting our porting experiences at the KDE

aKademy conference in Spain last August and we enjoyed meeting the

Safari team in Cupertino - thank you very much KDE and Apple again for

your kind invitations. In the next few months we will continue to

finalize our product, and we hope that our first devices with the new

browser will be shipping already beginning of next year. At the same

time we want to strengthen our dialogue with you on how to share and

integrate our code, discuss future features and agree on how to

collaborate in the future. We are delighted to be working with you on

how to "mobilize" WebCore/KHTML and JavaScriptCore/KJS to create the

best Web browser based on open source components for mobile devices.


Best regards,


Your S60 mobile browser team at Nokia,


Roland Geisler

Head of Marketing & Strategy, S60 Browser

Nokia


PS: Please forward this email to any contributor whom I may have missed.