Dreamweaver uses Opera’s Small-Screen Rendering technology to preview webpages for mobile phones
11 CommentsPublished May 3rd, 2007 7:37 PM EDT By Daniel Goldman
As I mentioned in late March, the new Adobe Creative Suite 3 (CS3) application includes a built-in rendering engine of the Opera browser. Opera’s rendering engine is for the majority of content manipulation, powering Adobe GoLive, Adobe Photoshop, and other components of CS3.
One of the neat components that uses Opera is Dreamweaver with Adobe Device Central (follow link for video demo). Adobe uses Opera’s Small-Screen Rendering technology to preview and test the appearance, performance, and behavior of webpage in a mobile environment.
Opera’s Small-Screen Rendering (SSR) technology shrinks text and images of webpage to fit the small screens of mobile phones, thus eliminating the need for a horizontal scrollbar. Learn more about this technology here.
(Hat tip to Michael Dunn)
Update: I forgot to mention that you could test out the small screen rendering in the desktop browser too. Just hit SHIFT+F11. (via WirelessDuniya)
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It seems like a negligably small use of the Opera browser, to just put in the SSR engine. I would have been more impressed if Dreamweaver used Opera’s core to preview and test the appearance, performance, and behavior of webpages in both mobile environments and desktop environments. Using Opera’s CSS and JS rules and entire rendering engine for everything would have been nice….
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this shipped on april 16! why has there been no press release from the company! are they keeping it a secret? I think they are obliged to communicate this through the stock exchange also
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spread this EVERWHERE..its gonna be a big deal
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Cool. I guess that’s one less reason to hate Dreamweaver.
For the record, I hate any form of IDE that auto-generates code, so it’s not just Dreamweaver. Just give me a text editor with syntax highlighting, a command prompt, and a compiler…
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tomah, I guess the reason a press release wasn’t published is because Opera was also shipped with CS2, so in a sense this isn’t new news, other than the fact that Adobe released an upgrade.
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IceArdor, I believe Opera is also used for desktop mode rendering.
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Daniel, the upgades are not free, and as such, they are a new product, it like declining to publish on a motorola phone, since they publishedlast years model.. however its posiibly that adobe demands limited press on this..
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@tomah
Seek and you shall find:
http://www.newsweb.no/index.jsp?messageId=139344
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Dreamweaver uses its own propitiatory engine, at least for the visual editing mode. It would be a lot of work to change to switch engines. I’m not sure about the preview mode.
GoLive is now dead, as far as I know.
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I’m kind of confused now.
Adobes Creative Suite (CS, CS2 + CS3) exists as several editions each as bundle of several applications. One of these applications is Dreamweaver which is included in some bundles since CS3.
Dreamweaver was formerly developed by Macromedia which was acquired by Adobe Systems in 2005. Adobe bundled Dreamweaver beginning with Creative Suite version 2.3
Opera partnered with both companies in aspects of integration of the Opera rendering engine in their products:
2002 with Macromedia to include Opera’s rendering engine with a wide range of Macromedia’s Web development products – but only for Mac platform (Opera’s press release)
2003 with Adobe “to include Opera’s rendering engine in future Adobe product releases, for the Macintosh and Windows operating systems” (Opera’s press release)
this seems to be the preparing agreement for the content of the next announcement:
2005 with Adobe – “Opera browser is now integrated in Adobe® Creative Suite 2″ which “will use Opera as the engine for the majority of content manipulation, powering Adobe GoLive® CS 2, Adobe Photoshop® CS 2, and other components”
– this sounds quite thrilling to me but the further press release gives the impression that Opera might be only used for a pretty small part of Adobe’s applications:
“helping developers create optimal Web pages”
“Web designers have the ability to view how Web page content will look on a small screen”
(Opera’s press release)
Now I have more questions than answers:
1) Does Dreamweaver use Opera’s rendering engine only on Mac?
2) Does Dreamweaver use Opera’s rendering engine only for SSR?
3) Does Photoshop use Opera’s rendering engine in normal editing mode (”content manipulation”)?
4) Is Opera’s part in any of this products “just” for SSR preview?
While already a yes for question 4 would be nice it would be really outstanding if the answer to question 3 is yes. Anyway I think it would be a good idea to spread word about Opera integration in Photoshop (if still true).
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It is very interesting, i dont think that the adobe use the Opera’s Small-Screen Rendering technology. Than these product very good