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    Opera presents Early Bird mode in Opera One to test upcoming features

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    • krishnakrverma
      krishnakrverma @andrew84 last edited by

      @andrew84: You provide so much feedback yourself, why don't you join them?? I mean... You should.

      Reply Quote 0
        1 Reply Last reply
      • burnout426
        burnout426 Volunteer last edited by

        Now that Opera One has Early Bird, when creating a new forum thread or Reddit it post, it'd be a good idea to mention whether you have Early Bird on or off. And, if it's on, it'd be good to mention the state of each specific Early Bird setting.

        Reply Quote 1
          1 Reply Last reply
        • Opera-QA-Team
          Opera-QA-Team Opera @rick2 last edited by

          @rick2: Thank you for your feedback about deprecating the Beta version of Opera and introducing the Early Bird program in the stable stream. We understand this is a significant change, and we want to clarify what it means for you.

          First, this change will not impact the quality of the regular stable stream. The stable version remains our primary, fully tested release, and it continues to go through the same rigorous quality assurance, automated checks, and manual testing as before. Stability, performance, and reliability of the main browser remain our top priorities.

          Second, the Early Bird program is entirely optional. It is meant for users who want earlier access to new features within the stable stream and are comfortable with the possibility of minor issues. If you prefer the most stable and predictable experience, you can simply stay on the regular stable version and ignore Early Bird.

          Third, we are not removing our Developer stream. Opera Developer continues to exist as our earliest, most experimental channel, where new ideas and features are introduced and tested first. The new flow looks like this:
          Developer → Early Bird (in stable) → Stable
          By removing the separate Beta channel, we can shorten the time it takes to deliver product updates. Instead of maintaining three parallel consumer channels (Developer, Beta, Stable), we now focus on Developer for early experimentation and Early Bird within Stable for broader real‑world testing. This reduces duplication of work and allows improvements and fixes to reach all users faster, without lowering the bar for quality in the stable stream.

          We truly appreciate everyone who has used Beta over the years and helped us improve Opera. Your feedback remains crucial, and the combination of Developer + Early Bird is designed to keep that testing spirit alive while making our release process more efficient and responsive.

          Reply Quote 0
            1 Reply Last reply
          • Opera-QA-Team
            Opera-QA-Team Opera @DerSchlingel last edited by

            @derschlingel: Thank you for your feedback about deprecating the Beta version of Opera and introducing the Early Bird program in the stable stream. We understand this is a significant change, and we want to clarify what it means for you.

            First, this change will not impact the quality of the regular stable stream. The stable version remains our primary, fully tested release, and it continues to go through the same rigorous quality assurance, automated checks, and manual testing as before. Stability, performance, and reliability of the main browser remain our top priorities.

            Second, the Early Bird program is entirely optional. It is meant for users who want earlier access to new features within the stable stream and are comfortable with the possibility of minor issues. If you prefer the most stable and predictable experience, you can simply stay on the regular stable version and ignore Early Bird.

            Third, we are not removing our Developer stream. Opera Developer continues to exist as our earliest, most experimental channel, where new ideas and features are introduced and tested first. The new flow looks like this:
            Developer → Early Bird (in stable) → Stable
            By removing the separate Beta channel, we can shorten the time it takes to deliver product updates. Instead of maintaining three parallel consumer channels (Developer, Beta, Stable), we now focus on Developer for early experimentation and Early Bird within Stable for broader real‑world testing. This reduces duplication of work and allows improvements and fixes to reach all users faster, without lowering the bar for quality in the stable stream.

            We truly appreciate everyone who has used Beta over the years and helped us improve Opera. Your feedback remains crucial, and the combination of Developer + Early Bird is designed to keep that testing spirit alive while making our release process more efficient and responsive.

            Reply Quote 0
              rick2 1 Reply Last reply
            • Opera-QA-Team
              Opera-QA-Team Opera @rnghwdbcs last edited by

              @rnghwdbcs: Thank you for your feedback about deprecating the Beta version of Opera and introducing the Early Bird program in the stable stream. We understand this is a significant change, and we want to clarify what it means for you.

              First, this change will not impact the quality of the regular stable stream. The stable version remains our primary, fully tested release, and it continues to go through the same rigorous quality assurance, automated checks, and manual testing as before. Stability, performance, and reliability of the main browser remain our top priorities.

              Second, the Early Bird program is entirely optional. It is meant for users who want earlier access to new features within the stable stream and are comfortable with the possibility of minor issues. If you prefer the most stable and predictable experience, you can simply stay on the regular stable version and ignore Early Bird.

              Third, we are not removing our Developer stream. Opera Developer continues to exist as our earliest, most experimental channel, where new ideas and features are introduced and tested first. The new flow looks like this:
              Developer → Early Bird (in stable) → Stable
              By removing the separate Beta channel, we can shorten the time it takes to deliver product updates. Instead of maintaining three parallel consumer channels (Developer, Beta, Stable), we now focus on Developer for early experimentation and Early Bird within Stable for broader real‑world testing. This reduces duplication of work and allows improvements and fixes to reach all users faster, without lowering the bar for quality in the stable stream.

              We truly appreciate everyone who has used Beta over the years and helped us improve Opera. Your feedback remains crucial, and the combination of Developer + Early Bird is designed to keep that testing spirit alive while making our release process more efficient and responsive.

              Reply Quote 0
                1 Reply Last reply
              • Opera-QA-Team
                Opera-QA-Team Opera @max1c last edited by

                @max1c: Thank you for your feedback about deprecating the Beta version of Opera and introducing the Early Bird program in the stable stream. We understand this is a significant change, and we want to clarify what it means for you.

                First, this change will not impact the quality of the regular stable stream. The stable version remains our primary, fully tested release, and it continues to go through the same rigorous quality assurance, automated checks, and manual testing as before. Stability, performance, and reliability of the main browser remain our top priorities.

                Second, the Early Bird program is entirely optional. It is meant for users who want earlier access to new features within the stable stream and are comfortable with the possibility of minor issues. If you prefer the most stable and predictable experience, you can simply stay on the regular stable version and ignore Early Bird.

                Third, we are not removing our Developer stream. Opera Developer continues to exist as our earliest, most experimental channel, where new ideas and features are introduced and tested first. The new flow looks like this:
                Developer → Early Bird (in stable) → Stable
                By removing the separate Beta channel, we can shorten the time it takes to deliver product updates. Instead of maintaining three parallel consumer channels (Developer, Beta, Stable), we now focus on Developer for early experimentation and Early Bird within Stable for broader real‑world testing. This reduces duplication of work and allows improvements and fixes to reach all users faster, without lowering the bar for quality in the stable stream.

                We truly appreciate everyone who has used Beta over the years and helped us improve Opera. Your feedback remains crucial, and the combination of Developer + Early Bird is designed to keep that testing spirit alive while making our release process more efficient and responsive.

                Reply Quote 0
                  1 Reply Last reply
                • Opera-QA-Team
                  Opera-QA-Team Opera @krishnakrverma last edited by

                  @krishnakrverma: Thank you for your feedback about deprecating the Beta version of Opera and introducing the Early Bird program in the stable stream. We understand this is a significant change, and we want to clarify what it means for you.

                  First, this change will not impact the quality of the regular stable stream. The stable version remains our primary, fully tested release, and it continues to go through the same rigorous quality assurance, automated checks, and manual testing as before. Stability, performance, and reliability of the main browser remain our top priorities.

                  Second, the Early Bird program is entirely optional. It is meant for users who want earlier access to new features within the stable stream and are comfortable with the possibility of minor issues. If you prefer the most stable and predictable experience, you can simply stay on the regular stable version and ignore Early Bird.

                  Third, we are not removing our Developer stream. Opera Developer continues to exist as our earliest, most experimental channel, where new ideas and features are introduced and tested first. The new flow looks like this:
                  Developer → Early Bird (in stable) → Stable
                  By removing the separate Beta channel, we can shorten the time it takes to deliver product updates. Instead of maintaining three parallel consumer channels (Developer, Beta, Stable), we now focus on Developer for early experimentation and Early Bird within Stable for broader real‑world testing. This reduces duplication of work and allows improvements and fixes to reach all users faster, without lowering the bar for quality in the stable stream.

                  We truly appreciate everyone who has used Beta over the years and helped us improve Opera. Your feedback remains crucial, and the combination of Developer + Early Bird is designed to keep that testing spirit alive while making our release process more efficient and responsive.

                  Reply Quote 0
                    DerSchlingel 1 Reply Last reply
                  • DerSchlingel
                    DerSchlingel @Opera-QA-Team last edited by DerSchlingel

                    @Opera-QA-Team Will this lead to the Chromium version in Opera stable being closer to the most recent Chromium in Chrome and Edge?

                    Reply Quote 0
                      leocg 1 Reply Last reply
                    • leocg
                      leocg Moderator Volunteer @DerSchlingel last edited by

                      @DerSchlingel I don't think it's related

                      Reply Quote 0
                        1 Reply Last reply
                      • rick2
                        rick2 @Opera-QA-Team last edited by

                        @Opera-QA-Team thaks for the respone, but I'm not worried about Stable (which I'll keep using as my main browser), just commenting that I'll stop (actually, I already have stoped) using Beta but don't want to switch to Developer as that is a bit too unstable for my taste.

                        Reply Quote 0
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