
The mobile browser wars continue. Hot on the heels of Opera's second Beta of Mini and Mobile and UCWB's version 7 release, Bitsream today announced that Bolt 1.6 is now available for download. If you are running a previous version of Bolt, you should be prompted to upgrade. New users can point their mobile or PC browsers at boltbrowser.com to download Bolt 1.6.
According to the press release , the new features in Bolt 1.6 are:

The password manager is a great addition. Retyping passwords on most phones is a pain, especially as many sites, like Yahoo, do not properly persist logins using a long lasting cookie. The password manager means that you should never have to retype your password.
Bolt 1.5 already had a socket transport option in Preferences , so I'm puzzled as to how that is a new feature. Perhaps 1.5's socket implementation was less than "full"? However as long as it's faster I'm not complaining. I didn't run any formal speed tests but 1.6 does seem to load pages a little quicker than 1.5.
Being able to set Bolt as the default browser is a huge plus for BlackBerry users. I wish that option was available on other platforms although I understand that on S60 and most feature phones it is impossible due to OS limitations.
While 1.6 doesn't represent a major upgrade, the new features are certainly welcome. I continue to be particularly impressed by Bolt's rendering quality and compatibility with virtually any site. Bolt is one of the very few mobile browsers that works with virtually all sites, even AJAX heavy ones like the desktop versions of iGoogle and Twitter. In fact, it even loads Google Wave, although replying and creating new Waves in Bolt doesn't quite work. The ability to deal with complex JavaScript is Bolt's strong point. This is an amazing accomplishment for a proxy browser. Opera Mini and UCWEB are way behind Bitstream in this regard. I'm really hoping that Bitstream can build on this strength by adding more features especially tabs and a fit to width mode in the next release.
I'm also hoping that an Android release is in the cards. I think that Android has a great future but that the default browser with its broken cache implementation and many render issues is holding the platform back. I notice that @boltbrowser Tweets about Android a lot. Is that a sign of Droid interest at Bitstream headquarters?
posted by Dennis Bournique
December 7, 2009 @ 12:12 pm
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