Linux 32 bit developed?
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pindos last edited by
@jimunderscorep said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
May I ask what keeps you in opera? You could move to chromium for instance...
I like Opera and use it for a 15 years. And does Chromium have support for 32 bit cpu for Linux?
It,s very sad. I have EeePC 1003, I've upgraded it to 2GB of RAM, replaced HDD with Intel SSD 240 Gb and Wi-Fi Adapter. And only CPU is weak thing in this machine. -
A Former User last edited by
@pindos
Unlike chrome, chromium is opensource, so distros package it in both 32 and 64 bits, so yes, chromium is available in 32bit.
Which distro do you use? -
A Former User last edited by
I'm fine with old version. But every update of chromium-codes breaks it. Is there any way around this without keeping old codecs with security vulnerabilities? (Ubuntu 16.04 LTS i386 here)
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kghn last edited by
@sgunhouse I'm working with an older machine (AMD Athlon XP 1800+ 1.53 GHz, 640M RAM, (originally ran XP) now running Xubuntu 16.04.3 LTS 32-bit. I've got a topic open at https://forums.opera.com/topic/23262/xubuntu-16-opera-12-16-browser-menu-stubborn-light-green-text-problem-how-change , and you just posted a good lead there for me. My plan for the next thing to try is to remove Opera and Firefox, install a desktop theme, re-install Opera 12.16, and report in with my results.
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pindos last edited by
@jimunderscorep said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
Unlike chrome, chromium is opensource, so distros package it in both 32 and 64 bits, so yes, chromium is available in 32bit.
Which distro do you use?I use Xubuntu 16.04.
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pindos last edited by
@jimunderscorep
This command doesn't work.
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Package chromium is not available, but is referred to by another package.
This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, or
is only available from another source
However the following packages replace it:
chromium-bsuE: Package 'chromium' has no installation candidate
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A Former User last edited by
My bad, the package is named chromium-browser, so the right command is
sudo apt-get install chromium-browser
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pindos last edited by
@jimunderscorep said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
sudo apt-get install chromium-browser
That's right! Thank you! I installed it.
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pindos last edited by
@nikt11 said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
run: opera --disable-update
Thank you! It works!
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A Former User last edited by A Former User
@nikt11 said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
I know and I use Vivaldi, but still much short of Opera. Unfortunately, on an old laptop I have no choice but to stay Vivaldi.
How does Vivaldi compares to Opera? Is this exactly the same JavaScript, CSS and DOM support? I need to be able to test for Chrome like browser and I only have a 32 bits machine, so if Vivaldi uses the same core as Chrome and Opera, that’s enough for me (I just hope it can import Opera’s bookmarks).
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A Former User last edited by
Most Linux distros and all operating systems are leaning to 64-bit. Hardware now a days is all 64-bit now.
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A Former User last edited by
@morpelli said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
Most Linux distros and all operating systems are leaning to 64-bit. Hardware now a days is all 64-bit now.
Buying a new computer is still expansive.
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zalex108 last edited by zalex108
@hibou57 said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
@nikt11 said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
I know and I use Vivaldi, but still much short of Opera. Unfortunately, on an old laptop I have no choice but to stay Vivaldi.
How does Vivaldi compares to Opera? Is this exactly the same JavaScript, CSS and DOM support? I need to be able to test for Chrome like browser and I only have a 32 bits machine, so if Vivaldi uses the same core as Chrome and Opera, that’s enough for me (I just hope it can import Opera’s bookmarks).
Yes,
You can import them.If you run into problems, just export them from Opera as Html, then Import in Vivaldi.
"You cannot know the meaning of your life until you are connected to the power that created you". · Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi
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A Former User last edited by
@zalex108 said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
If you run into problems, just export them from Opera as Html, then Import in Vivaldi.
Precisely, I was wondering how to export to HTML from Opera, I can’t find it in the menus.
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zalex108 last edited by zalex108
At least in latests versions.
If you are in an older one, look into //Flags
"You cannot know the meaning of your life until you are connected to the power that created you". · Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi
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A Former User last edited by
Bookmark exporting was added in opera 47, so yes, it should appear on 32bit version as well
About vivaldi.
Vivaldi is one more electron-based app. That (electron) is the reason of its huge ui customizability. Imho, the electron apps of today are what the java ones were ~10 years ago. Apps that are simple to make because they use a simple language/toolkit, but they are very demanding on resources. The onliest electron app I used to have was skypeforlinux, which I threw away once it reached version 9.x and became even worse than before.If you want a chromium-based browser to test your pages, why not use plain chromium? Almost all distros build it for 32bit and have it in their repos.
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pindos last edited by
@jimunderscorep said in Linux 32 bit developed?:
Bookmark exporting was added in opera 47, so yes, it should appear on 32bit version as well
How can it appear in 32bit Opera if it is stopped developing on version 45?
As for Vivaldi it is very slow on my Asus EeePC. Better to use Chromium. It has 32bit version.