Aug 26, 2010 16:41 GMT  ·  By

The owners of an Apple iPhone might soon have the possibility to try out a new mobile browser on their devices, namely the already popular Skyfire.

According to the latest news around the Internet, the browser's development team would plan on submitting their solutions for approval into the App Store as soon as next week.

For the time being, however, nothing has been officially announced, but it shouldn't be too long before the company unveils to the world an App Store submission.

Moreover, the guys over at mobilecrunch say that the Skyfire development team has entered the final stages on testing the solution for Apple's iPhone device (not the solution in the photo to the left, which is only a mockup).

It seems that Skyfire started working on porting their mobile solution to Apple's iPhone soon after Opera was approved for the App Store.

The first public iPhone build of Skyfire is almost here, and it should be submitted for App Store approval early next week, though it still remains to be seen whether Apple would give it green light or not.

In case there are some who haven't encountered the mobile browser until now, we should note that it was among the first such applications to come with support for Adobe's Flash technology on mobile devices.

Moreover, the latest release of Skyfire for Android comes with a wide range of enhancements, including improved support for Android 2.2-based handsets (phones powered by the latest flavor of Google's OS).

In case the rumors pan out, iPhone users out there should soon have another mobile browsing solution available for download for their devices, and one of the most competitive on the market, we might add.

Of course, this is all conditioned by Apple approving the application for inclusion in the software portal, so we'll keep our fingers crossed for all to go well in the end.

With that announcement regarding Skyfire's submission to the App Store set to be made as soon as next week, a response from the Cupertino-based company should not be too far behind, so keep an eye on this space for more on this.