Opera 65 comes with an improved tracker blocker and redesigned address bar
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A Former User last edited by
@leocg i was hoping you could expand on it, so i could have a better understanding of your opinion
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@ultravio1et Due to the complexity and/or amount of tasks that they need to deal with on a daily basis, among other things, it's my opinion that an entry level computer has a quad core CPU and 8 GB of RAM.
And it's also my opinion that anything less than that may be called a computerized device (or whatever name you like) but not a computer.
I also think that programmers should take it in consideration when developing their programs, as well as users when choosing those programs. -
andrew84 last edited by andrew84
@leocg said in Opera 65 comes with an improved tracker blocker and redesigned address bar:
quad core CPU
Some pentium/celeron can have 4 core also but they'll be worse than 2 cored i3.
computerized device sounds interesting )
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firuz-u7 last edited by
@leocg: pentium/celeron Pentium / celeron have 2 cores and 4 logical flows; this is convenient in offices where i3 i5 i7 i9 gaming computers are not needed, not to mention laptops with mobile processors where performance is even weaker but the browser is not a game and it should not load the CPU so much
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A Former User last edited by
current dev. 66.0.3502.0 (and earlier), if started without network connection (offline), Opera hangs when clearing the cache (opera://settings/clearBrowserData) - continuous loop, the rotating circle rotates, otherwise no reaction.
Tab must be closed manually. Repeat results in the same.
Opera GX does not show this behavior. -
davidos last edited by
The same is with embedded audio players.
For example:
http://player.polskieradio.pl/-3
http://41.dktr.pl:8000/trojka.ogg -
treego last edited by
Little blue dot for personal news updates no longer appears next to the personal news icon in the sidebar when updates are available in Version:65.0.3467.42 here.
Windows 7, 32-bit
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A Former User last edited by
@herrpietrus: You do know people are allowed to have a different opinion of Opera to you, right?
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A Former User last edited by
To be honest, I much prefer the more traditional sidebar, as seen in browsers like Firefox. You have an icon in the address bar and don't have to have a permanent sidebar to the left of the browser. The new bookmarks panel is great, even if not exactly a new idea but having the permanent sidebar panel there as well is quite unnecessary.
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A Former User last edited by
@sac: Each to their own but I quite like it. You get the name of the website which is handy when quickly glancing at the dropdown menu (it's exactly the same as the way Firefox does it and I'm used to that). Can't please everyone I guess.
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A Former User last edited by
Also getting to the full bookmarks view is now a complete faff, especially if all you want to do is empty the bin. Maybe include the bin in the bookmars panel at least?