From Opera 12 to 20...a giant leap back for mankind
-
Deleted User last edited by
I think most people using internet for surfing, looking for information and checking lates gossip on social media. For this purpose they only need a clean and simple browser, like Opera 20. My guess is also that most people using Opera don't know a sh.. about all technical stuff and add ons for their browser. when I look at computers to friends or people at work I have never seen someone having more than 10-15 folders with bookmarks.
So, get used to Opera 20, I love this browser.Exactly. It's a hard-sell message to those who think of themselves as "power-users" but the reality is that number of users is very small compared to the majority who don't need to configure everything under the sun. Speed... compatibility... stability. Opera 20 has all of this. The Opera Team is going in the right direction. Sure it will lose some old-timers who insist upon having the new browser set up exactly as the old, but it will gain many others who don't want or need this AND who do not trust Google and therefore would not consider using its Chrome browser.
-
alreadybanned last edited by
I think most people using internet for surfing, looking for information and checking lates gossip on social media. For this purpose they only need a clean and simple browser, like Opera 20. My guess is also that most people using Opera don't know a sh.. about all technical stuff and add ons for their browser. when I look at computers to friends or people at work I have never seen someone having more than 10-15 folders with bookmarks.
So, get used to Opera 20, I love this browser.Exactly. It's a hard-sell message to those who think of themselves as "power-users" but the reality is that number of users is very small compared to the majority who don't need to configure everything under the sun. Speed... compatibility... stability. Opera 20 has all of this. The Opera Team is going in the right direction. Sure it will lose some old-timers who insist upon having the new browser set up exactly as the old, but it will gain many others who don't want or need this AND who do not trust Google and therefore would not consider using its Chrome browser.
I think you guys are too busy smelling your own farts. You grossly underestimate how many people are not just looking to be entertained but actually get some work done. That is a much larger demographic than the power user crowd.
Also, if one does not trust Google why would Opera be an option? It uses the same engine as Chrome that Goolge contributes to. You cannot get rid of Google as a search option and only power users are going to even figure out how to remove it from the speed dial. You also need a Google account in order to have access to many of the extensions at the Chrome store which can be used with this browser and with so few options in Opera's repository, it becomes almost a must.
-
awzx last edited by
For this purpose they only need a clean and simple browser, like Opera 20.
OK, sounds reasonable, but what's wrong with Chrome, really? Seems like just the browser for those people. Opera, on the other hand, has always been known for its "power-user" features in the first place.
@leushino
AND who do not trust Google and therefore would not consider using its Chrome browser.
And why the hell would I trust Opera then? After they betrayed their main userbase for some obscure reasons and since their browser is also close-sourced project just as Chrome, those two browsers don't make much difference to me in every sense.
-
Deleted User last edited by
Ha! So who do YOU trust? Tell me and you can be assured that there are a lineup of users who would tell you you're placing your trust where it isn't warranted.
Opera did not betray anyone. Opera is trying to survive and I don't call that "obscure" reasons. The old browser never attracted much of a userbase and it was time for a change given the fact that Presto was increasingly difficult to correct (the truth is - it was a mess and Opera could not keep it compatible with many popular sites).
-
alreadybanned last edited by
Ha! So who do YOU trust? Tell me and you can be assured that there are a lineup of users who would tell you you're placing your trust where it isn't warranted.
Opera did not betray anyone. Opera is trying to survive and I don't call that "obscure" reasons. The old browser never attracted much of a userbase and it was time for a change given the fact that Presto was increasingly difficult to correct (the truth is - it was a mess and Opera could not keep it compatible with many popular sites).Yeah, I agree that site compatibility was one issue plaguing Opera but the real fact is, Opera ASA is a small Norwegian company and no matter what, it will never be able to compete with large American corporations. The "if you can't beat 'em join 'em" approach seems to be an even bigger failure however according to the usage stats that have Opera on a consistent decline. Alienating your loyal users in search of new fish in a sea you could never swim in is a bad gamble imo. Opera needs to be a specialized browser rather than a clone to big brother
-
Deleted User last edited by
But it doesn't have to alienate its loyal users IF they would have more patience and faith with the company. I refuse to give up on Opera. It's too early to say they've failed. It takes time to write a new browser from scratch. I started with Opera in 1999... that 15 years with the company. I still believe in Opera.
-
awzx last edited by
Ha! So who do YOU trust?
Any open-source browser really. Firefox, Midori, Konqueror - just to name a few.
Opera did not betray anyone. Opera is trying to survive and I don't call that "obscure" reasons.
Survival is pretty much sufficient background for a betrayal. And, even if it really was a matter of survival (in what I don't believe), there could be other options to do it, but they came up with the easiest and stupidest one -- to throw all they have done in a bin and to switch to a completely other user base, with a completely new browser. Nuff said.
PS: maybe now, in order to "SURVIVE", they have to spy on their users, how do I know? How do I know what might be their next big move in order to stay afloat?
-
herrpietrus last edited by
As I've said in other topic - there are a few things which could be easily made by Opera devs, a few things which shouldn't be thrown and could be provided if not as a part of the browser then maybe as a separate extension written by Opera team and those things will help to convince old users to use new Opera's browser and to still support it, promote on the internet... I'm not thinking about e-mail client, but... simple bookmarks manager, some way to add new bookmark when bookmarks bar is closed, simple RSS extension similar to already extisting Smart RSS, built-in tab switching options now provided by Classic Tabs, perhaps some extension to make fast notes...
I'm sure that Opera Blink would have been embraced by most users then. A change from Presto to Blink would have been an advantage, not a problem.Unfortunately instead of new, compatible with current web browser we got, well, of course tweaked and in some areas more functional Chrome copy, but still a bit to primitve copy. That's where the problem lays.
And I know, some could say - it's natural, since new Opera let us to use extensions so now it's up to us to write a proper one... But then only differences between Opera an Chrome are SpeedDial and mouse gestures... Nice and useful but not so amazing for old users... We simply think that Opera should stay somewhere between giving us everything and giving us nothing saying that know we can write our beloved browser by ourselves.
-
oscarasker last edited by
well, maybe if opera is not developed under chromium, maybe a lot of people will consider.... you know why there are people still using opera browser instead of ggle chrome???? because they simply hate google, but still the opera (which is before a unique browser intended not for common people) is not using the same yucky platform as ever! sorry, i just really hate ggle and everything about it, and it is really heartbreaking to see that your before favorite browser is now as trashy as chrome.... really, i don't see why people keep on using such products, actually there's nothing special to them.... people are asking me why i am using opera, i simply say "chrome is only for common people", but then they are saying "opera is now based on chromium, what's the difference then?" ooh god.... i don't know what to say.... this is really horrible....
-
Deleted User last edited by
PS: maybe now, in order to "SURVIVE", they have to spy on their users, how do I know? How do I know what might be their next big move in order to stay afloat?
I think you should find another browser. Opera is obviously not the browser nor the company for you.
-
Deleted User last edited by
really, i don't see why people keep on using such products, actually there's nothing special to them.... people are asking me why i am using opera, i simply say "chrome is only for common people", but then they are saying "opera is now based on chromium, what's the difference then?" ooh god.... i don't know what to say.... this is really horrible....
And what I don't understand is: why are you here? If Opera is so horrible, why are you here? Why not find a browser that floats your boat and join their forum?
-
awzx last edited by
I think you should find another browser. Opera is obviously not the browser nor the company for you.
Oh yes, I guess that's what you keep telling to everyone when you don't have anything else to say. I already have "found" another browser, but thanks for that useful advice.
-
berng last edited by
i am using opera, i simply say "chrome is only for common people", but then they are saying "opera is now based on chromium, what's the difference then?" ooh god.... i don't know what to say.... this is really horrible....
There are difference. Some are pretty obvious. Others, like the Google update tasks added to Windows and added to your Windows scheduler to run often are not so obvious.I'm so sorry this is so horrible for you. Maybe you need to get used to another non-Chrome based browser. I have a pretty full life and Opera by far is my favorite browser. If Opera dropped the desktop browser would be disappointed but not in agony. Life goes on.
-
d24 last edited by
Agree (to first comment), also using 12 so far don't mind 20 it's just missing tab stacking and my old bookmarks... how hard could it be to add features (or at least the option to features) you already had before!?
-
Deleted User last edited by
I think you should find another browser. Opera is obviously not the browser nor the company for you.
Oh yes, I guess that's what you keep telling to everyone when you don't have anything else to say. I already have "found" another browser, but thanks for that useful advice.
Then if you are using another browser and have only bad things to say about the Opera browser AND the company, you are really doing little more than trolling here.
-
Deleted User last edited by
Agree (to first comment), also using 12 so far don't mind 20 it's just missing tab stacking and my old bookmarks... how hard could it be to add features (or at least the option to features) you already had before!?
Features are being slowly added back on to a stable browser. I think the patience and civility that you have shown (so unlike many of the complainers who habitually haunt the Opera forums) are greatly appreciated.
-
fluxrev last edited by
people are asking me why i am using opera, i simply say "chrome is only for common people", but then they are saying "opera is now based on chromium, what's the difference then?" ooh god.... i don't know what to say.... this is really horrible....
There have been a not insignificant number of comments in this vein —— that is, where the primary concern is neither practical nor philosophical but social in nature —— expressed on this forum (including its previous incarnation) since last spring, and it points to a characteristic of certain (younger) Opera Presto users. They have been Opera users not only for its functionality but also for its "cool" factor. This goes some way to explaining the emotional attachment that these users have to Opera Presto, and why suggestions involving alternate methods, workarounds, and the virtue of flexibility in the new, Blink era often fall on deaf ears.
-
meridivs last edited by
Leushino, dear, get a life. After all there's nothing more you say on every thread beside - opera 12 is dead, you can go elsewhere.
If there's all that Opera has to offer then I'm moving on. I hope you're smart enough to do the same. Cheers!
-
tyrantilles last edited by
I am also a Opera user (lover) from since I got my first computer - from before 2002. I use it as my primary browser from the beginning.
For me things are clear. The devs started to destroy Opera since they shut down Opera Unite. I have no need of a Chrome clone and I will never use the new version of Opera. For now I use 12.16 and when this version will get too old for my needs, I will look for other browser, probably Firefox.
I am truly sorry to see Opera project finished and all the wonderful settings and services once provided by this great browser, turned to trash. -
albatros48 last edited by
For me things are clear. The devs started to destroy Opera since they shut down Opera Unite. I have no need of a Chrome clone and I will never use the new version of Opera. For now I use 12.16 and when this version will get too old for my needs, I will look for other browser, probably Firefox.
Good luck! You certainly will come back to Opera soon....
I use Opera Developer as main browser and Firefox as second browser.
Though Firefox looks very pretty and nice, it is far not so reliable as the new Opera and takes much longer to start.
From my point of view Opera is still one step in advance.
Opera is very well designed and optimized for fast and effective browsing and I wonder, how the Internet Explorer can have so much
users therefore.