Mikhail,<br>
<br>
If I can impose on you for one more test --<br>
<br>
At <a href="http://topicalweb.com/making-ebooks/no-opera.htm">http://topicalweb.com/making-ebooks/no-opera.htm</a> is a css
slideshow that in a non-Opera browser will display a capital O with a
slash through it after the words "July 2005 A test of the
Nokia 770". Clicking on the capital O will toggle you into (and out of)
presentation mode and either clicking on the page or pressing an arrow
key will advance you to the next "slide" (of course, the slideshow is a
single html page).<br>
<br>
With a desktop version of Opera, you won't see the O, nor will you be
able to see the second slide if you go into presentation mode.<br>
<br>
I'm wondering if the Nokia 770 browser will be detected as an Opera
browser and if not whether the Javascript will enable a pseudo
presentation mode.<br>
<br>
Appreciate your looking at this (or anyone else who can assist).<br>
<br>
Thank you,<br>
<br>
Roger<br clear="all"><br>first initial last name at gmail<br>Teleread (e-books: <a href="http://teleread.org/blog/">http://teleread.org/blog/</a>)<br>Electric Forest (digital libraries: <a href="http://altheim.com/ef/">http://altheim.com/ef/
</a>)<br>
<br>