The iPhone and iPad may come loaded with Safari, but that does not mean you're stuck with just that browser. Several good iPhone browser apps have been released, giving you more options for your mobile browsing experience. We found iPhone browsers that can play Flash video (sort of) or navigate web pages significantly faster than Safari. There's even a browser app that can stream audio and video to an Apple TV. See which iPhone browsers earn a recommendation.
1. Dolphin
Dolphin (Free) is hands-down the best browser on this list. From the things that it does better than Safari--it's a little bit faster, it offers download management and crash recovery, it has tabs and fullscreen mode--to the things it does that Safari doesn't like a gesture-based interface (draw a design on the screen and load a website!), it's powerful, innovative, and free. It's not a perfect browser--lack of native iPad support and the inability to import Safari bookmarks are two strikes against it--but give it a try and you may not go back to Safari.Overall rating: 4.5 stars out of 5.
2. Opera Mini Browser
The Opera Mini Browser (Free) is a terrific alternative to Safari. It is significantly faster than the iPhone's built-in browser app, and you can really tell the difference when browsing graphic-heavy websites. Opera Mini is so much faster because it shows you a compressed version of the web page that is routed through its servers (according to the developers, all data is encrypted beforehand). The large navigation buttons are also easier to use than those on Safari. However, pinching and zooming isn't quite as elegant using the Opera Mini Browser -- content seems to jump all over the place. Overall rating: 4.5 stars out of 5.
3. Atomic
While not quite ready to be a full-time Safari replacement, Atomic is close. Its fullscreen mode is more useful than Dolphin's and it offers tabbed browsing, the ability to import bookmarks from Safari, a native iPad version, gesture support, and many other useful features. If you like to customize your apps, or want a web development testing environment, you'll love Atomic and its huge number of options and settings. A few interface peculiarities and slightly slower-than-Safari 3G speeds hold it back a bit, but Atomic is a very solid browser. Overall rating: 4 stars out of 5.
4. Mercury
Mercury ($0.99) is a solid browser held back from being even better by a few bugs. It offers a terrific fullscreen mode, tabbed browsing, bookmark importing, and gestures--and backs those features by being very fast as well. Its download manager is buggy, and gestures can be too, but if the kinks can be ironed out, Mercury will be a contender for a top spot. Overall rating: 3.5 stars out of 5.
5. Photon
Photon ($3.99) makes the best claim on delivering Flash to the iPhone of any browser on this list. It does this by streaming a remote desktop session from a computer that runs Flash to your iPhone. Needless to say, this can sometimes be a little slow or cause some user interface weirdness, but overall, it works. Over Wi-Fi, in particular, Hulu videos may be a bit pixelated, but they play smoothly and audio stays in sync. This isn't a desktop Flash experience, but it's the best I've seen on the iPhone so far. Overall rating: 3.5 stars out of 5.
6. Switch
Switch (US$4.99) is an iPad-specific browser that offers a host of nifty features. Not only does it include multiple user accounts -- so each user can access his or her own bookmarks and maintain their privacy -- but it also supports AirPlay and HTML5 video. Switch is also a bit faster than Safari when loading web pages. Unfortunately, it has a few stability issues and lacks the ability to import bookmarks from other browser apps. And while it supports AirPlay, the browser doesn't work withAirPrint and you can't send web pages via email. Overall rating: 3.5 stars out of 5.
7. WebOut
If you have an Apple TV, the WebOut browser (US$0.99) is definitely worth a look. Unlike Safari, WebOut can stream both audio and video to a second-generation Apple TV using the AirPlay feature (Safari only outputs audio at this time). In our testing, it was easy to stream HTML5 video to an Apple TV, and videos loaded quickly. WebOut also holds it own as a regular iPhone browser app, with snappy navigation and a pleasant, streamlined interface. It does throw up some random error messages, however, and it's missing a few features like auto-complete for web addresses. Overall rating: 3.5 stars out of 5.
8. CloudBrowse
To get around the problem of the iOS not supporting Flash or Java, CloudBrowse uses a neat trick: it runs a full desktop version of FireFox on a server and then streams that session to your iOS device so you get all the benefits of Firefox. However, because it's a desktop browser, not one specifically designed for the iOS, you also can a lot of rough edges and odd interface experiences. Plus, Flash audio and video get out of sync easily and playback is jerky. Good idea, but the execution isn't there yet. Overall rating: 2.5 stars out of 5.
10. Flash Browser
9. Puffin
10. Flash Browser
Puffin ($0.99) is another app that touts its ability to play Flash as a major feature. Technically this is true, but its Flash playback isn't stellar. Right now, Flash video on the iPhone looks more like a series of still images, not a smooth sequence of events (the situation is a bit better on the more-powerful iPad 2). Puffin has relatively few features, but it's a speedy app and usually loads sites quicker than Safari. If it can improve its Flash playback, it could be a real contender. Overall rating: 2.0 stars out of 5.
With a name like Flash Browser, you'd think this app ($1.99) would be better at actually playing Flash files. However, I was never able to get it to play the Flash files it downloaded (yes, to play Flash here, you download the files as separate items rather than viewing them in websites as intended). Combine that with a very slow browser that doesn't have many other features and Flash Browser is one to avoid.Overall rating: 0.5 stars out of 5.
11. SkyFire
SkyFire (US$2.99) debuted to a lot of hype because it is the first iPhone browser app that can play Flash video. It works by transcoding Flash videos to HTML 5, so there is a short loading process before you can play the video in a new screen. Videos at YouTube load quickly and play glitch-free over both WiFi and 3G. However, the app was less successful at other sites. A Lil Wayne video at MTV.com was pixelated and had no volume; likewise, I couldn't get an SNL Digital Short at NBC.com to load at all. Hulu.com is also off-limits. The app saw a huge demand when it first launched, which may explain these growing pains. We'll reevaluate the app after some of these kinks have been worked out.
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