Here are some suggestions for those looking for alternatives to Opera 12 (and use Opera Mail)
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laurenbacall last edited by
Anyway, back on topic ;). Cross-posting from another thread in case it may be helpful:
Originally posted by laurenbacall:
Originally posted by serious:
Well, not stopped using it, but def. pushing back any upgrade and looking for viable replacements (firefox looks good with a handful of extensions), but need yet to find something that supports bookmarks shortcuts which I use waaay often.
The Add Bookmark HereΒ² addon for Firefox can add keywords to bookmarks (it basically uses the same system Firefox uses for custom searches but adds it to bookmarks). Forgot to mention this in that addons list I posted about :p
The Speed Dial addon also allows adding of multiple sites per tile, separated by a pipe character (|). It can then be used as a kind of bookmark folder, opening each site in it's own tab.
I would have added it to my original post if it weren't for the 24-hour edit limit :rolleyes:
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Deleted User last edited by
Originally posted by Salahuddin1:
You know, you may think you're pretty intelligent, but all you're doing on these forums is annoying people. If you were truly intelligent you would see that. Or perhaps annoying others is what gives you satisfaction in life.
You constantly attack me personally rather than deal with the subject matter. That tells me that your argument is a weak one. Please stop the personal attacks. There is no call for that. Thanks.
Returning to the subject at hand (i.e. alternatives to the Opera suite) the choices are few but very evident and truly not requiring a thread in my opinion.
- FF/TB
- Chrome/gmail,yahoo,gmx,outlook (to name a few webmail accounts) OR The Bat, Windows Live Mail
- IE 11/see above (assuming you have Windows 8.1)
- SeaMonkeyOR
- stick with Opera Presto (recommended) and keep an install of Opera Next to watch its developmentNone of this should be difficult for anyone to figure out for himself and make his own decision. All it takes is a little searching (i.e. YouTube, PC World, PC Mag, etc) and a willingness to experiment. I said it from the start and I continue to believe it: this does not necessitate a thread. Surely at this level most people can figure this out for themselves with a little searching. Besides - these alternatives have been presented countless times in dozens of threads already.
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A Former User last edited by
Here are the alternatives:
Opera 17 + Outlook.com / Yahoo! Mail / GMail / Your Personal Choice.
Opera 17 + Opera Mail
Opera 17 + Thunderbird
And so on...You're welcome!
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stng last edited by
Originally posted by rafaelluik:
Here are the alternatives:
Opera 17 + Outlook.com / Yahoo! Mail / GMail / Your Personal Choice.
Opera 17 + Opera Mail
Opera 17 + Thunderbird
And so on...You're welcome!
For what reason? Just for a loyalty to a lovely brand-name and app's icon?
Opera 17 isn't better than any other Chromium-based clones (Blink's shells):
- UI is immensely backward and primitive
- Nearly zero customizability and personalization
- Resources hogging and memory eating
- Chrome's extensions means limited functionality (due to the API) with really bad affection on a cpu/memory consumption -
Deleted User last edited by
Originally posted by rafaelluik:
Here are the alternatives:
Opera 17 + Outlook.com / Yahoo! Mail / GMail / Your Personal Choice.
Opera 17 + Opera Mail
Opera 17 + Thunderbird
And so on...You're welcome!
Good stuff.
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A Former User last edited by
Originally posted by STNG:
Originally posted by rafaelluik:
Here are the alternatives:
Opera 17 + Outlook.com / Yahoo! Mail / GMail / Your Personal Choice.
Opera 17 + Opera Mail
Opera 17 + Thunderbird
And so on...You're welcome!
For what reason? Just for a loyalty to a lovely brand-name and app's icon?
Yeah it's only because I like Opera icon better.
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blackbird71 last edited by
Originally posted by leushino:
... Returning to the subject at hand (i.e. alternatives to the Opera suite) the choices are few but very evident and truly not requiring a thread in my opinion.
- FF/TB
- Chrome/gmail,yahoo,gmx,outlook (to name a few webmail accounts) OR The Bat, Windows Live Mail
- IE 11/see above (assuming you have Windows 8.1)
- SeaMonkey
OR
- stick with Opera Presto (recommended) and keep an install of Opera Next to watch its developmentNone of this should be difficult for anyone to figure out for himself and make his own decision. All it takes is a little searching (i.e. YouTube, PC World, PC Mag, etc) and a willingness to experiment. I said it from the start and I continue to believe it: this does not necessitate a thread. Surely at this level most people can figure this out for themselves with a little searching. Besides - these alternatives have been presented countless times in dozens of threads already.
Well, IMHO, you've left out a couple of genuine contenders, depending on Old-Opera user preferences and habits: there are also Dooble, Cyberfox64, and Maxthon... which would make your "list" into:
- FF/TB
- Chrome/gmail,yahoo,gmx,outlook (to name a few webmail accounts) OR The Bat, Windows Live Mail
- IE 11/see above (assuming you have Windows 8.1)
- SeaMonkey
- Maxthon/gmail,yahoo,gmx,outlook (to name a few webmail accounts) OR The Bat, Windows Live Mail
- Dooble
- Cyberfox64/TBOnce one takes into consideration the various methods of customizing some of the members of this browser array to achieve the wide range of performance needs of different Old-Opera users, there is most certainly a justification for a thread like this! I, for one, have already learned some good ideas from this thread about how some of the alternatives I'm trialing can be tweaked and customized.
You might argue whether the thread belongs in the Opera forums in the first place, but I'll leave that up to the mods. Opera users who are looking at alternative browsers like this are users who have developed needs and desires for how a browser ought to serve them, based on Old Opera's profound customizability over the years... and they are simply trading information to try to recreate a browser that serves their needs. If Opera wants, and is able, to develop their New Opera browser to achieve that, then well and good. But thus far, they haven't, in these users estimation... hence this thread is providing an appropriately-titled, one-stop view of alternative browsers that can be tweaked/modified to meet needs of other Opera users - a focus for which one can look long and hard (but vainly) out on the Intertubes - I know, because for almost a year, I've been trying.
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Deleted User last edited by
Well... I'm glad you learned something. Very good. Hopefully all those poor lost souls will find the alternative browsers they require and migrate to them. And so the story goes.... on and on.
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frenzie last edited by
Originally posted by alf5000:
anybody yet found a way to make FF(derivatives) doing 'Spatial Navigation'?
There was http://www.mozilla.org/access/keyboard/snav/
But even though that page was last updated in 2012, in 2011 they apparently decided to remove support: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670880#c2
Anyhoo, there's other alternatives:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/mouseless-browsing/
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/vimperator/ -
alf5000 last edited by
@Frenzie - whow, that was a really quick answer!
I read it as 'No, there isn't a way to teach FF Spatial Navigation'.My replacement for Opera Presto (THREE different applications and a ton of extra addons --- O<12 was really an impressive program)
- FF
- Thunderbird (with the nice side effect of the Lightening Addon)
- Autohotkey
- lots and lots of addons (laurenbacall did a nice summary above)just want to add some addons to laurenbacalls's list - well, not actually to make FF more resemble Opera but I came across these addons when trying to make FF behave like Opera -- I quite like them
Imagus: The extension is intended to complement/extend the browser's image handling capabilities
Autopager: a Firefox extension which automatically loads the next page of a site inline when you reach the end of the current page
Element Hiding Helper for Adblock Plus: Element Hiding Helper is a companion extension for Adblock Plus meant to make creating element hiding rules easier.
Fox Input: Keyboard-friendly addon that lets you access search fields, input fields etc
Hide Caption Titlebar Plus: Maximize your screen space by controlling the presence of Firefox window Title-bar (Caption) & borders!
HyperTranslate: Advanced inline translator: Select the text then press selected key to translate selection.
XMarks: FREE Bookmark Sync -
Deleted User last edited by
In reading these last few posts, I realize that I've been wrong about the usefulness of this thread. I was wrong. It definitely has a positive role to play in helping out other Opera users.
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laurenbacall last edited by
Originally posted by rilef:
Add keywords to Firefox or SeaMonkey bookmarks by right-clicking any bookmark, then select Properties. No extension is necessary. Firefox and SeaMonkey keywords work like Opera 12 bookmark nicknames.
Ah, I can see it now (on OSX there's no Properties context menu item for bookmarks), there's an 'expand' arrow in the bookmark manager pane that displays the extra input box. Good to know , saves an extra addon for some.
I suppose the benefit of the addon is adding the Keyword input box to the pop-up bookmark star in the addressbar when you first create one, as well as Description, and a few other options, similar to expanding Opera's 'Details' button.
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A Former User last edited by
SeaMonkey - same rendering engine as FF... only the GUI is a bit different.
Very nice. Have been using it on Linux for a while. -
frenzie last edited by
Originally posted by rilef:
The only "Pro" I see for SeaMonkey is an integrated mail client (which apparently you do not use).
Maybe I'm missing something, but SeaMonkey doesn't seem especially more integrated than any old browser and mail client, other than that they've got a few little buttons in the bottom left. Sure, the shared memory aspect could be of interest on low-memory systems, but something like Claws or Sylpheed is light too (or even something text-based like Mutt). I think it's the GUI integration that makes Opera's approach interesting.
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stng last edited by
Originally posted by ocky:
SeaMonkey - same rendering engine as FF... only the GUI is a bit different.
Very nice. Have been using it on Linux for a while.The UI is awful when it's compared with Opera. I am disappointed about how a Mozilla-based browsers had no any appreciable progress in this area after a years of their evolution.
I hope someday someone will try to recreate Presto Opera's user interface(which is still unmatched) on XUL-layer.
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Deleted User last edited by
Originally posted by ocky:
SeaMonkey - same rendering engine as FF... only the GUI is a bit different.
Very nice. Have been using it on Linux for a while.Look at the real estate you've lost at the top of your screen. To my tired eyes, this looks like my 1997 Netscape browser... only 16 years out of date now.
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Deleted User last edited by
Originally posted by rilef:
Thus, there appears little reason to switch from Opera mail to SeaMonkey or Thunderbird mail (i.e. from one deprecated mail client to another deprecated mail client). Or vice versa. That is, if you use a mail client, and you like this mail client, you should keep this mail client.
To my way of thinking there is really only one viable email client (if you must have one) and that is the Bat. T-bird development has pretty much dried up since Mozilla dropped it. Other than a community offering security patches and bug fixes, it is what it is (and it's nothing to write home about).
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blackbird71 last edited by
Originally posted by leushino:
Originally posted by rilef:
Thus, there appears little reason to switch from Opera mail to SeaMonkey or Thunderbird mail (i.e. from one deprecated mail client to another deprecated mail client). Or vice versa. That is, if you use a mail client, and you like this mail client, you should keep this mail client.
To my way of thinking there is really only one viable email client (if you must have one) and that is the Bat. T-bird development has pretty much dried up since Mozilla dropped it. Other than a community offering security patches and bug fixes, it is what it is (and it's nothing to write home about).
Is there really any significant reason for any continued development of any eMail browser, in general, these days? From my observations, most of them have rather fully plugged any browser exploitation holes over the last number of years, and their feature-sets have all long since peaked out. Which means, other than possibly finding one that's integrated into a web-browser (for those to whom that matters), there shouldn't be much user concern about whether or not there's active development of a particular eMail browser. And given that so many users simply rely on web-based eMail access, there's not much economic sense for purveyors of eMail programs to invest much into adding bells and whistles... so the eMail browsers out there now are likely not to change much in years to come.
Myself, I'm a firm believer in downloading and keeping permanent copies of all my eMails on-site... so I've primarily used a stand-alone eMail program (currently PocoMail, now out-of-production... before that, Outlook Express... and before that, Outlook) for years, using webmail only for a quick check of messages if I'm on the go somewhere. The main features of an eMail program, to me, reside in the user comfort-option category (foldering, sorting, searching, archiving/backup, security against exploitation, etc, etc). And those features for most eMail browsers currently available have remained largely static for quite a long time. Hence, the folks running Opera, Outlook Express, PocoMail, Thunderbird, or a myriad of other eMail browsers will probably be able to use them for years to come, as long as the OS will still support them (or vice versa). Bottom line: use whatever you like for your needs, whether or not it's still actively being developed... it isn't going to suddenly go away after you start using it.