Allaboutsymbian did a comparison of the Symbian Anna web browser (Web 7.3) and the Web 7.2 which is actual browser on Nokia C7 and other symbian^3 devices. The result was impressive. Take a look at it.
How the Test was done.
The Nokia C7 and X7 were tested over the same WiFi connection (4 Mbps ADSL) from the same location (router about 1 metre away). Each website was loaded in turn by typing the URL into the address bar. This was repeated five times with the highest and lowest times discarded and the remaining times averaged to give the results below. The testing methodology was designed to replicate real world usage conditions, rather than aiming for the fastest possible results, while still maintaining a valid comparison.
The methodology used did allow for the use of caching. This does give Web 7.3 an advantage, as it makes better use of caching than Web 7.2, but the updated WebKit engine also makes a significant contribution. The use of caching does reflect the reality of mobile browsing, where both multiple visits to the same site (e.g. news, search) and multiple pages (with common header and footer elements) on the same site are common.
Browser comparison results

From these results, it is possible to draw out a number of conclusions:
- Web 7.3 loaded pages an average of 23.5% faster than Web 7.2 across the pages tested.
- There’s a significant variation in performance improvements across different websites, ranging from 30% slower to 44% faster.
- In general, larger web pages (1MB+) show a greater performance improvement than smaller pages (<100kb).
Here are the tabulated results:
| Site |
Nokia C7 |
Nokia X7 |
Difference |
Percentage |
| google.co.uk |
1.6 |
1.2 |
-0.4 |
-26% |
| news.bbc.co.uk |
22.9 |
13.1 |
-9.8 |
-42% |
| youtube.com5.4 |
10.9 |
7.2 |
-3.7 |
-33% |
| en.wikipedia.org |
6.5 |
8.5 |
+2.0 |
+30% |
| allaboutsymbian.com |
20.6 |
14.9 |
-5.7 |
-27% |
| mobile.allaboutsymbian.com |
5.4 |
4.9 |
-0.6 |
-10% |
| global.nytimes.com |
33.7 |
18.7 |
-14.9 |
-44% |
| theregister.co.uk |
13.6 |
9 |
-4.6 |
-33% |
You should bear in mind that these results should been taken as indicative only. It’s not really possible to carry out a fully valid comparison on the live web, giving the dynamic nature of most pages and the constantly changing network and connectivity conditions. Moreover, it is increasingly common to serve up different versions of web pages to different devices and different browser capabilities may dictate whether some resources (e.g. JavaScript) are loaded or not. This may explain the en.wikipedia.org result.
One of the things that the raw numbers do not show is the time when it is possible to start moving (dragging) around a half loaded web page. For both Web 7.2 and Web 7.3, this is usually about two thirds of the way through the page load, but this does vary. Web 7.3 seems to handle this better than Web 7.2, but is hard to measure this effectively, as at least part of this is due to improved page scrolling performance in 7.3 over 7.2.
Conclusion
The results clearly show that Web 7.3 offers faster page loading and rendering times than Web 7.2. Although the testing was done on the X7 and C7, the same should apply on other devices. A small testing sample comparing the N97 mini (upgraded to firmware v30 and Web 7.3) against the Nokia 5230 (using Web 7.2) showed a similar improvement (around 30%).
It is worth pointing out that it would be possible to use a different testing methodology and get a different set of specific results. However, the overall result – a 25% improvement in load times – does feel about right after using Web 7.3 in day to day usage over the last month or so.
The result makes us glamor for the new Symbian Anna more. Note that to get the best browsing experience (for now and even against the symbian Anna) you should go for Opera Mini v11.