The Opera Mini Java 240x320 Fixed build (typically based on version 4.2, 5.1, or 7.1) includes:
Thousands of people still daily-drive feature phones for digital minimalism, durability, or nostalgia. An old Nokia can still send texts and make calls, but its native browser is dead. Opera Mini Java 240x320 Fixed breathes new life into these devices, allowing them to read Wikipedia, check email (Gmail basic HTML), browse Reddit (old.reddit.com), and read news sites.
This refers to the screen resolution in pixels. 240 pixels wide by 320 pixels tall. It is the classic portrait QVGA (Quarter VGA) resolution used by iconic phones such as: Opera Mini Java 240x320 Fixed
| Browser | Device | Viewport | JS Engine | Load nytimes.com (2011) | Data used | |---------|--------|----------|-----------|------------------------|-----------| | Opera Mini 7 | Nokia 6303c | 240x320 | Server-side | 9.2 sec | 18 KB | | Nokia WebKit | Nokia 5800 | 360x640 | On-device | 34 sec | 478 KB | | UC Browser Java | Samsung Champ | 240x320 | Server-side | 11 sec | 24 KB |
Opera Mini’s fixed 240px column layout avoided horizontal panning entirely, reducing cognitive load for users accustomed to linear reading. The Opera Mini Java 240x320 Fixed build (typically
Unlike smartphone browsers that used a single scrolling view, Opera Mini 240x320 introduced a split-pane interaction:
This design left exactly 260 vertical pixels for content, encouraging developers to keep initial viewport height below 260px for above-the-fold information. This design left exactly 260 vertical pixels for
Under GPRS/EDGE (30–120 kbps), a typical 50 KB desktop HTML page loaded in 6–12 seconds. The proxy reduced data usage by 80–90%: