Opera 9 with Widgets and BitTorrent Now Available 385
ZarK writes "Technical Preview 2 of the upcoming Opera 9.0 browser is now available for download. In addition to the general bugfix and rendering improvements there's also new features, like x-platform type widgets, improved content blocking, bittorrent support, thumbnail preview of tabs and more. Improved functionality also comes in the fact that a good lot of the scripts from userscripts.org will now work, advanced settings have improved in opera:config, and more browser customization is available at the opera community. However, some clear indications that this is still an alpha release is the experimental support for NTLM which breaks the proxy functionality for some users, and the fact that widgets are always on top."
A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:2)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:5, Interesting)
Now if only websites had a way to offer a BT version of their download files, so that they'll never get Slashdotted again...
RSS viewing too tedious (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:2)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:5, Informative)
And I thank GOD that Opera doesn't support ActiveX. ActiveX is one of the most insecure pieces of programming I have ever come across. Using ActiveX is akin to browsing the web and opening email attachments without a firewall or antivirus package installed. An open invitation to disaster.
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:5, Interesting)
You see, I'm working on a website that will never be usable in IE. IE is too primitive, and broken. It can't handle xml mime types, and won't even in IE7. It can't do SVG natively, and I don't feel like wrapping all my many SVG widgets in object tags and writing code for a bad Adobe plugin. And besides, people should just plain be discouraged from ever using IE.
SVG though is important to the website, I suppose I could use something gay like flash or java, but I really wanted this to be a pure site. I thought that it would mean that it was Firefox only. Some friends chided me into trying to make it work with Opera and Konq though...
And I was shocked. Opera 8 gets alot of the non-interactive SVG right. Better yet, the Opera 9 beta gets alot of it right, period. And the places where it's screwed up? Bad syntax on my part, that Firefox ignores but that Opera is (rightfully) bitchy about. I won't start using Opera 9, but there's no reason why others shouldn't. It kicks ass.
(And as for Konq, things are looking good. It did the non-interactive SVG really well, and Konqueror 4 looks like it will do just as well as the other two. Still waiting on Safari, but I think it will soon be pretty good itself)
But for IE, we might never need browser specific hackery at all.
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:3, Informative)
I don't see how anyone can say the Opera UI is not very customizable unless they haven't spent h
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep you can. Checkout these custom buttons [nontroppo.org], specifically "Close current page & switch to previous one".
Drag it to a toolbar or click it to have it installed into your toolbar customisation pallete under "My Buttons". If you disable "Show close button on each tab" in General (Tools -> Preferences) then you'll end up with behaviour identical to Firefox.
This isn't true,
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:4, Interesting)
(And personally I wouldn't want to use Bittorrent given a choice, because its so slow - but thats a different story)
Re:A browser with native BitTorrent (Score:3, Interesting)
Hmmm...maybe I'll try it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hmmm...maybe I'll try it. (Score:5, Interesting)
For the most part if your code is up to standards it looks fine in opera. 90% of the time it renders like Mozilla. Opera is not making the designers job harder. It's closer than most to passing the Acid 2 test.
I'm already trying it out. Full of more great stuff, as one expects. They smoothed out a lot of the features they added in Preview 1 and added so much more.
I heard reports of problems with upgrading so I did a clean install and spent the afternoon adding my custom buttons and changing my search options. (I no longer have to use 3rd party tools to change them)
Between custom buttons, panels, and widgets I think Opera can now easily do anything a Firefox extension can do.
Re:Hmmm...maybe I'll try it. (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm...maybe I'll try it. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm...maybe I'll try it. (Score:5, Insightful)
The point of an acid test is that is should be hard, something to strive for. The idea is that if you have passed this test you likely have a good implementation of CSS. It is possible to fail the acid test and be good in other aspects of the standard, or pass it and still be deficient, but it should give a good indicator. It is worth noting that every modern browser passes the first acid test [w3.org], but it was considered a challenge at the day. IE didn't pass it before version 6.
The focus of the CSS Working Group in the W3C has the last five years changed focus from more features (CSS3) to more universally consistent presentation (CSS2.1). I believe this is a good move, and the Acid2 test should be viewed in that light. Opera intends to support CSS 2.1 and I presume that is the case with Firefox and Konqueror too, and we all change our implementations in tune with how CSS2.1 develops. IE is definitely far behind, but should be commended for moving in the right direction.
At some point Opera, FF, and Konqueror/Safari should render CSS2.1 more similar to each other than they would do to their own older versions, and hopefully not differ in any meaningful way. Whether IE one day is going to turn this gang of three into a gang of four remains to be seen, it won't happen with IE7, but hopefully the development won't stop there.
Jonny Axelsson, Opera Software
Re:Hmmm...maybe I'll try it. (Score:2, Interesting)
Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Firefox developers will really have to step up to the plate with the upcoming Firefox 2.0 release if they want to retain the marketshare they currently have. Firefox will have to show some pretty serious speed improvements, and far better memory management. It can't leak memory at the rate which the current 1.5 releases do.
Already there (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't like using one program for browsing, mail, and bittorrent? Then don't. Just use the browsing capabilities, and the rest of the features will be sufficiently hid away.
Re:Already there (Score:5, Insightful)
We often hear how Firefox's greatest strength is its extensions. Well, to be honest, when you're using Opera you don't need to delve into extensions. Opera includes all the functionality you want by default.
Re:Already there (Score:2)
Re:Already there (Score:2)
Re:Already there (Score:2)
Ok, so that was kind of trollish, but honestly... I can't stand Opera's cookie management.
Re:Already there (Score:2)
*Probably more like 4. By most of the standards that I use, Safari and Konqueror are both pretty close to Opera and Firefox.
Re:Already there (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:FlashBlock (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Already there (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Already there (Score:2)
Re:Already there (Score:2)
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
If Opera is someday 90%, and Firefox still with only 8%... this is good for Firefox. Opera encourages website developers to write correct xhtml and javascript, which Firefox handles just fine.
Your skepticism is understandable. (Score:2)
Do you remember that feeling you got when you first used Firefox? Indeed, it often gave people that rush of "I'm trying something new, and by jove, I love it!" Well, you'll likely get the same feeling if you give this release of Opera a try.
Re:Your skepticism is understandable. (Score:2)
As I said, great for IE users to move to Opera. Not so great for your typical Firefox user (now your typical slashdot user, sure).
Re:Your skepticism is understandable. (Score:5, Insightful)
And performance.. That's a biggie. But then you lose the warm fuzzies of using an open source program, as well as the guarantee that the program is absolutely not installing any spyware or compromising your privacy. It's always a tradeoff.
Re:Your skepticism is understandable. (Score:3, Insightful)
While it's less likely that an open source program includes malicious code, it isn't something we should rule out completely. That holds espe
Re:Your skepticism is understandable. (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you scrutinized every single line of Firefox source? No? Then you really don't have that guarantee. Don't get me wrong, I love open source -- I was a Gentoo dev until I got sick of the politics, and now I contribute to various projects. But it's a bad idea to claim that "open source = no malware", because you can't make that promise unless the code has truly been audited.
Re:Your skepticism is understandable. (Score:2)
Then, I found Download Statusbar [mozdev.org]. Why the thing isn't the default download manager for 2.0, I don't really know. Honestly, it kicks ass.
And Adblock was nice. Session Saver was better. I learned little tricks like getting rid of a bookmark's name on the bookmark toolbar, just using the favicon. I can fit 40 or so in without e
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
Now if IE starts getting updated more regularly, people will stick with it. And why not? If it has all the features you want (want enough to move anyway), why change?
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
Because it's alot like trusting that spouse when they tell you that they won't cheat on you ever again. Even though it's the 19th time you've caught them in bed with someone else. Everyone that believes Microsoft's lies about security keeps getting burned.
And while most people are too ignorant to know, IE is primitive and will remain so. Their javascript doesn't comply with standards. Their browser won't do correct mime types (hey NoMoreNicksLeft, why does it want me to download index.php when I go
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
I'm doing stuff that I thought was only ever possible in flash or maybe java. And it's crap now, wait til you see some of the stuff I've got ideas for but not quite the skill yet to implement...
Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
I'd love to see Opera and Safari support things like XUL so that we could create really rich cross-browser apps. I know Mozilla has submitted most of those specs for standardization so maybe it could happen. That kind of rich app could let those three seriously kill IE if developers would embrace such rich interfaces.
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
Except for things specifically designed to be brower extentions, it would seem like XUL is a near total failure as a development toolkit. No wonder because "rich cross-browser apps" have been possible in both Java and Flash for some time.
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
Java and Flash are much more heavy approaches. Practically you're just downloading a program and running it on the user's machine. I could do the same thing by writing an app in just about any language. I've written Java and Flash programs and they do have their uses but they are not a real standard for lightweight applications. The benefit to web-based apps is in not having to download a heavy program and learn a new interf
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
The only rational explaination that I've heard was from a XUL developer on a Mozilla list who said basically "You broke my app again, and this time I'm not going to fix it." You want others to adopt XUL, but I'm not sure that mozilla wants others to adopt XUL either.
Java and Flash might not be ideal, but they sure are established, and provide well-known targets for your applic
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
I believe this is a "feature" (as in, something spefically designed into the browser) so that extensions have to be tested by their creator (or whoever's distributing it) every time there's a firefox update. Instead of having the default be all extensions work with the new update. The default is that all extensions break under a new update.
Me, I'd prefer backwards
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
Re:Its CSS, CSS2 and CSS3 support is superb. (Score:2)
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
Care to give specific examples?
Not that I'm aware of. There are hacks for older versions of Opera, but I've not seen any for 8.0, 8.5 or the 9.0 prev
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
To be fair I just downloaded and tried the site I'm working on in Opera 9 and am happy to say it renders very well. Looks almost identical to how it looks in Safari. In both Opera and Safari the page is rendered on the left hand side of the window rather than down the middle. Not sure if that is a bug in Opera and Safari or in Firefox but it's not
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
Have you looked around here [quirksmode.org] and here [positioniseverything.net] to find out whether the issues you're seeing have explanations or workarounds?
Re:Little benefit to Firefox these days. (Score:2)
So let me be the first
Of course (Score:5, Insightful)
Nightmarish grammar aside, the biggest clear indication that this is not final is the "Opera 9 Technology Preview 2" title on the linked page. Also, there is the fact that it is Opera labs, not the main site. Contrary to what the title would lead you to believe, this is just an open beta.
The big splash is the widgets. I am of the opinion though that the widget concept is being overdone completely. Now, you can have start.com widgets running in your Opera browser with widgets on your OS with widgets (either OS X Tiger's dashboard/Windows Vista Beta Sidebar or via third-party stuff a la Konfabulator/Superkaramba/Object Desktop). Enough alreay. How many different ways do I need to get my local weather forecast?
I give it an A+. (Score:5, Interesting)
The email client is vastly improved, and it feels much quicker than in previous releases. It was quite quick at listing my 1800 MB mailbox, and it's now possible to scroll through the entries at a rapid pace without delay.
The opera:config feature is quite nice, and presented very well. It's far nicer to view than the comparable about:config capabilities of Firefox, yet just as easy to locate and modify preferences.
Overall, this release is an improvement over the last, while still retaining the small size and high responsiveness that Opera is known for. I give it an A+.
Not needed yet... (Score:5, Insightful)
What next? CEO to swim Atlantic again? (Score:5, Funny)
In reference to the previous ver 8, the CEO promises to swim from Norway to USA, with a brief stopover for mom's hot coffee in Iceland. That is, if the download reaches 1,000,000 in 4 days..
Apparently it did! I remembered downloading a copy, in a bid to see such sport, but alas..
Press Release [opera.com]
Previously, it was reported that the attempt failed due to various reasons, including physical condition. Let's hope he's is fitter this time around.
Yeah, no malfunctioning support raft.
Swim Attempt Report [opera.com]
Sincere regards to Opera Team..
-PS Crazy stunts like these are really fun!
A darn good job. (Score:4, Insightful)
As a programmer, I also wonder how they designed the engine to be soooo fast, that even makers of other browsers cannot figure out how to replicate what makes Opera fast, into their browsers. Can anyone enlighten me?
It's a matter of marketing and hype. (Score:2)
As for others replic
Re:A darn good job. (Score:3, Informative)
When compared to Firefox, its performance is superb. I know a number of people who used to use Firefox, but ended up switching to Opera 8.51. They just got tired of the memory leaks of Firefox, and were especially disappointed by the very poor 1.5 release.
Opera has become to Firefox what Firefox became to Internet
Re:A darn good job. (Score:2)
I've had no problems with Firefox 1.5 itself although a couple of the extensions I like did develop minor bugs. I often open up fifty tabs at a time and don't have any major memory problems although I'm sure some exist.
Only Safari gets close to matching Firefox's standards support. It's great to see this competition to be the best at standards support though. Firefox, Safari, an
Re:A darn good job. (Score:2)
Firefox extensions make Firefox something great... buggy Firefox extensions cause 99% of the memory leaks discussed (it especially seems like people neglect the fact that Web Developer has some significant leaks).
Oh well, what're you going to do, you support buggy extensions and you'll g
Re:A darn good job. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A darn good job. (Score:2)
Re:A darn good job. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A darn good job. (Score:2)
The plain truth is that Firefox is a pile of shite. Half of the Geek community doesn't want to admit it because of it's Open Source credentials, but the memory leak bugs in Firefox are an Archillies heel that goes right up to the neck. The leaks were there in version 0.9 and they're still they're in version 1.51, which just shows what a crap development model Open Source
Re:A darn good job. (Score:2)
Firefox has its problems. I don't deny it. But hell, this is the only issue I ever hear people complain about that sounds like a real problem at all... they'll fix it eventually. And at this rate, long before IE7 is out. In the meantime, use whatever you want, use anything at all... as long as it's not IE.
Re:A darn good job. (Score:2)
P2P v2.0 (Score:4, Insightful)
Think...seeding/leeching CNN homepage
Bittorrent and Firefox (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Bittorrent and Firefox (Score:3, Insightful)
Is it possible that someone at Opera--a company with money, resources, time, and managerial direction--simply stated, "we'd like to have Bittorrent support in our next release. I don't care of getting it to work properly is boring and not nearly as sexy as designing clever widgets, or that there already exist exte
Question: why are you suprised? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Bittorrent and Firefox (Score:2)
Reality: Firefox gives describes recomended hardware, Microsoft gives the bare minimum it will run on.
Myth: Opera (now 100% free) is the fastest Graphical Web Browser in Windows.
Reality: Dillo or Links 2 would probably be faster if someone cared to compile them on Windows.
Myth: Internet Explorer 6.x is clearly faster than Firefox 1.x overall and is significantly faster from a cold start.
Reality: The rendering speed difer
Hello World! - Acid 2 Test (Score:3)
http://www.webstandards.org/act/acid2/test.html [webstandards.org]
Bye Firefox ... its been fun (Score:5, Informative)
back/forward (Score:2, Interesting)
With Opera, (pre 9.x, even,) you just click back, and the previous page jumps right up; fully rendered and ready. --With Firefox, you have to wait, and get to listen to the processor throttling up, as if this was Java 1.2 on Win95..
Firef*cks be gone..
SVG Capabilities Improved (Score:3, Informative)
I am loving the SVG implementation [codedread.com] in the Opera 9 Previews, I update information on my blog. TP2 includes several fixes to the SVG implementation over TP1 and TP1 was a HUGE leap from Opera 8.x. Opera now covers more SVG functionality than Firefox 1.5 does, and is faster on my PC.
Opera is the new native SVG implementation to beat.
MathML? (Score:2)
Why I love Opera (Score:3, Informative)
2. It is lean, very lean. 4.7MB and tonnes of features. How do these people do it?
3. It is easy on memory. Firefox has bad memory leak problems. Earlier today Firefox was taking up 300MB+ on my system. I close all tabs and it did not free any memory. Enough is enough. This is the primary reason I am ditching Firefox.
4. The keyboard shortcuts are sane and there are lots of them.
5. It is more standards compliant than Firefox.
6. It now works with maps.google.com.
7. Did I already mention that it was fast?
Cookie control? (Score:2, Interesting)
Still, competition is good, and this is certainly good competition.
Re:Cookie control? (Score:2)
Tools - Preferences - Advanced - Sites - Default settings - Cookies - Delete cookies on exit.
Additional links (Score:5, Informative)
Here are some additional links with more information and screenshots, so you won't have to wade through all of the Opera forums to find them:
Re:Additional links (Score:3, Informative)
Was released yesterday. (Score:3, Interesting)
2006-02-07 13:35:26 New Opera Preview Out (Index,Software) (rejected)
My biggest complaint with Opera - page zooming... (Score:2, Interesting)
I downloaded the stable Opera 8.5 a few days ago, and I have to say (as a current Firefox on Windows user) that Opera has an awful lot going for it. It's fast and seems a lot less bloated and quirky than Firefox, plus I've been finding a few features I really like.
But the one issue that kind of blows it for me is the page zooming. I happen to be one of the many people who due to eyesight issues often increase the browser's text size. One thing I love about Firefox over IE is that it has an easy hot key t
Tab movement (Score:2)
Tips & Tricks after a days use (Score:4, Informative)
Been using this now and tried to find all the hidden goodies, and here's my few tips. Note that all shortcuts mentioned are only tested on Windows:
Hm.. well that's what I've found so far
The content blocker (Score:2)
Unbelievable (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Impressive (Score:2)
Also, just to note that this is still really buggy. I installed it earlier, and it kept crashing at a certain site. Yes, I know its still in alpha, just a note for those trying Opera for the first time. Opera 8.51 is stable, so don't take the frequent crashes into consideration for Opera 9 just yet :)
Other useful links (Score:2, Informative)
Widgets user guide [opera.com]
Search engine customization tutorial [opera.com]
Content blocking tutorial [opera.com]
Setup info for tab thumbnails [opera.com]
(Regarding that last one, I am still convinced that tab thumbnails are kind of silly, and that Opera's tiling function is already much more useful. See here: The Problem with Tab Thumbnails [cjas.org])
Re:*sigh* (Score:2)
Re:Using it right now (Score:2)
Re:Bittorrent (Score:2)
Re:not for linux-amd64 (Score:2)
*cue elevator music*
Re:Underrrated (Score:3, Insightful)