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Okay folks, what is the dominant resolution these things are set at?
What are their UAs?
Seems to me that these hand helds are going to bring UA delivering even more into the mainstream.
Nokia3330/1.0 (04.16) UP.Link/4.2.2.9
Mozilla/1.22 (compatible; MMEF20; Cellphone; Sony CMD-Z5) UP.Link/4.2.2.9
Mitsu/1.1.A UP.Link/4.2.2.9
Panasonic-GAD35/1.1 UP.Browser/4.1.24d UP.Link/4.2.2.9
EricssonT68/R101
Panasonic-GAD35/1.0 UP.Browser/4.1.22j
MOT-D5/4.1.5 UP.Browser/4.1.23c UP.Link/4.2.2.9
Nokia6210/1.0 (03.01)
SAMSUNG-SGH-A300/1.0 UP/4.1.19k
This is for IE from the Compaq iPaq. It doesn't understand CSS or anything inside <? ?> brackets (as you might have in XHTML). Otherwise it renders fine. The 240x320 is the full screen size. There are two settings that you can use, a fit to screen where it automatically wraps at the end of a line, essentially putting a <br> tag after 240 pixels, and a normal view where you get horizontal and vertical scroll bars. You can turn off downloading graphics with a touch of a button.
A person could browse while it is sitting on its cradle, using a 802.11b wireless connection, or a wireless connection using cellular technology. In my area, AT&T Wireless offers a $30 a month unlimited download service. Modem card costs $300. Bandwidth the same as a 19.2 modem. If you roam outside of AT&T's coverage, though, you pay five cents a kilobyte!!! Keep me away from big graphics.