(Credit: CNET/Screenshot by Jessica Dolcourt) The problem with statistics is that it’s too easy to jigger data down to numbers that prove in the end how quickly the exercise can resemble art as much as science. Take the latest stats regarding Opera’s mobile performance, for instance. StatCounter’s Tuesday graph showed proof of Opera’s climb above the iPhone’s Safari browser for the month of May. Yet the claim that “Opera took 24.6 percent of the worldwide market compared to 22.3 percent for iPhone” is quickly followed by the admission that one only needs to calculate page views from the iPod Touch for mobile Safari to bypass Opera’s lead. Web surfing from the Touch alone represents 14.9 percent of May’s mobile browsing, according to StatCounter. Add it to iPhone’s browser score and Safari’s 37.2 percent overall market share quickly outpaces Opera’s not-quite-25 percent. The deeper you dive, the murkier it gets. What StatCounter didn’t make clear in this report , and what is absolutely essential to gauging the popularity of one browser solution over another, is which Opera browser StatCounter counted. Was it Opera Mini , the build for Java phones? Or Opera Mobile, which works with Windows Mobile and Symbian platforms? Or was it both? If the final count indeed includes page views from all the browsers powered by Opera Software, then it could also cover white labeled browsing from a number of Archos personal media players and from the Nintendo DSI. If it doesn’t, should it? Even Opera isn’t totally certain what StatCounter’s methodology sucks in, though a spokesperson did tell CNET that the company puts a lot of faith into StatCounter’s figures. A representative at StatCounter was not immediately available for comment. Opera versus Safari, or iPhone versus everything else? You might also wonder if this statistical volley between

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Does Opera outperform iPhone’s Safari browser?