It might be web browsing, whatever it's designed to do.
Its to get everyone an email address and basic web browsing.
Like it or not, Web browsing is about to be interrupted by a few commercial messages.
The activities included with the system provide support for word processing, web browsing, and multimedia.
I don't know if that plus some basic web browsing is important enough to justify it.
If by most users you mean "people who only use the computer for web browsing and light gaming" then sure.
The router's speed will have little effect on standard Web browsing.
These machines can easily handle e-mail, Web browsing and other activities as well.
My iPhone is a lot more convenient for web browsing.
These netbooks are best used for written documents, small programs and web browsing.
These processors can handle most programs out there, from Web browsing to war games.
They work by putting the ability of caches to speed up Web browsing to a different end.
Yahoo's directory makes Web browsing easier, and the service has more than 800,000 users a day.
What makes the iPhone's web browsing so outstanding is its approach to limited screen real estate.
Uniden and others promise Web browsing on future e-mail telephones.
Polipo will make web browsing faster or at least appear to have less latency.
Maybe add 100mb of web browsing to the package, and for $15/mo you'd have a special kin plan that would sell like hotcakes.
Web browsing on the iPhone is a dream.
To most people who follow wireless communications, phone-based Web browsing means reading two or three lines of text on a tiny display screen.
Chrome secured 32.7% of the global web browsing on that day, while Internet Explorer followed closely behind with 32.5%.