From Opera 12 to 20...a giant leap back for mankind
-
A Former User last edited by
IIRC Voice was removed from Opera because it was a third party product that was no longer supported by its originators.
That's not to say that Opera could not have probably found an alternative, but presumably they decided that its level of usage didn't warrant that.
-
sanfloriani last edited by
Having used Opera since Netscape disappeared (1999?), I agree with all the negative comments expressed above. HELP is ridiculous, user-friendly features like customisable toolbars have disappeared, no way of opening a local HTML file from the browser, no viewable cache, etc. etc. - the list of my complaints is much, much longer.
Fortunately I had kept an installable copy of Opera 9, so I'm using it more and more frequently in lieu of this sorry new release.
-
zoombee last edited by
I've being using Opera for 14+ years and it's been my preferred browser for it's great set of features that are present until v.12.17. Since Opera decided to discontinue all those features and a Desktop interface (I use Win 8.1) and support for Opera 12.17, I can only say good bye and move on to Firefox. It's a damn shame!
-
A Former User last edited by
The windows to sites (I'm sorry, I don't know their name in English) were easily available...
Did you mean page icons in the Speed Dial?
All in all, I really don't want to use Chrome 20 ever again, and will just wait for Opera 13 with a new engine or something, that would be more compatible with more demanding sites.
And myself personally have a Chrome as well - which suffices the need for Chrome;) -
rockstarkenny last edited by
Agree that Opera 12 where last good version of Opera. All version from 15 to 23 are experimental an incomplete. I just finished an fresh install of win7 64 and have used Opera 22 at my personal computer before the new win install. Just found out the Opera Link wont work in Opera 23. To have my bookmarks and speed dials are important to me and I have to figure out Opera Link and synch work again and again in every new version Opera releases.
So this is a goodbye from me to Opera. I don`t want a web browser that is experemental, incomplete and would give me a new grey hair in every new (stable) version that gets released. To me, Opera is way less user friendly after version 12.
-
lem729 last edited by
Just copy your profile every now and then. It's simple to do, and no big deal.
-
rockstarkenny last edited by
You
re right it
s not a big deal, but that`s the whole point with Opera Link that Opera does that kind of things for me. -
A Former User last edited by
Kenny, don't use backtick quotes - they create showing the code here on these forums, use apostrophes.
-
rockstarkenny last edited by
I may be banned for this, but this is how I write on other forums. If Opera forums can
t handle that, that
s just another reason to quit using Opers browser. -
quarter9ie last edited by
Times has changed and so did Opera, but honestly the new Opera is horrible, sad, void but at least is 0.35 seconds more fast with less strange alien look options! What is a shortcut? Viva la simplicity! (for your average user)
What I think is really ironic is how Opera (Presto) was ahead in functionality and looked like everybody was trying to copy ideas from it but Opera remained as an obscure browser.
I really appreciate the effort you do ranting about the new Opera, but our Swiss army browser is lost, un-appreciated and has no future with the current "friendly" trends.
Maybe this wouldn't happen if the marketing team had taught the normal user how to make us of the advance options in Opera Presto.
I'm still using Opera 12.17 and Firefox for page compatibility.
But we do still have hope and I hope more people is willing to help this project:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/otter-browser/"Every end is a new beginning"
-
kesetrum last edited by
I like this "DON'T COMPETE BUT JUST STAY UNIQUE!"
One short question folks, is there any way to delete "individual cookies for some site, rather than delete all cookies?"
In the past Opera 12, We can do this easily. Even modified the cookies itself -
lem729 last edited by
One short question folks, is there any way to delete "individual cookies for some site, rather than delete all cookies?"
In the past Opera 12, We can do this easily. Even modified the cookies itselfYou can do it with an extension. You might try the Opera add-on, EditThisCookie. https://addons.opera.com/en/extensions/details/edit-this-cookie/?display=en
There are more possibilities if you look at Chrome extension. Click@Clean (a Chrome extension) has the feature you want, along with a lot of other features. https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/clickclean/ghgabhipcejejjmhhchfonmamedcbeod
If you don't want all of the features, and just want to look for a specific Cookie Manager
extension, you might like Vanilla Cookie Manager. https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/vanilla-cookie-manager/gieohaicffldbmiilohhggbidhephnjj?hl=en
I've only done a very quick look, so there may well be more possibilities out there.To download a Chrome extension easily, you need the Opera extension, called Download Chrome Extension, https://addons.opera.com/en/extensions/details/download-chrome-extension-9/?display=en
or Extension Source Viewer, https://addons.opera.com/en/extensions/details/extension-source-viewer/
-
pu67pal last edited by
I am using Opera web and mobile browser since 2004, yeah pretty 10 years from now. This is one of the best browser internet today have. On a readers survey on my career and jobs news website Employment News , 90% mobile phone users and 60% smartphone users has Opera as their primary web browser.
I am happy to see innovations happened in Opera community these days.
-
Deleted User last edited by
Hi
thanks for Opera company
i use opera from ver 4
i have all email archive in opera mail
i have more than 1000 rss feed reader in opera
i have history from 10 years ago
i have more more good times with opera 12
why you dont support opera 12
opera 12 not a browser its my "net Home"
please again Support opera 12
opera 20 very very bad idea. -
Deleted User last edited by
Hi
thanks for Opera company
i use opera from ver 4
i have all email archive in opera mail
i have more than 1000 rss feed reader in opera
i have history from 10 years ago
i have more more good times with opera 12
why you dont support opera 12
opera 12 not a browser its my "net Home"
please again Support opera 12
opera 20 very very bad idea.They won't support, deal with it.
-
lock0206 last edited by
i have both the new opera and opera 12.00
out of the 2 i prefer opera 12.00. this is due to the fact that so much of it i can change to my own customizations. yes it is now becoming laggy, behind the times. but cause it has so many of my own customizations which help and i cannot seem to work out how to do it on the new opera's...
if anyone here plays the game Tribal Wars then you will know that opera 12.00 is as far the best browser there is for the game.
however like this game and many over organizations they are moving away from the older browsers to newer ones, which are pushing there players to stop playing.
what we want is the Opera Team to see that they need to add the old settings back into the new browsers.
-
dafalias last edited by
I am sick and tired of the rude "shut up and stick to Opera 12.x or go find another browser"-comments.
Yes, we have understood that you find Opera 2x.x the greatest achievement in browser history.
The low market share Opera was suffering was not due to being to "geeky" or having too many features.
In fact, Opera has always been technology leader and many, many features were copied by other browsers, starting with the MDI.
Operas low market share was due to lousy public relations work. Netscape died and was reborn as publicly very well received, slim (now not so slim any more) Firefox.
IE is pre-installed on every Windows system, so first choice for every non tech affiliate user.
Opera was first choice primarily for people using the internet for work, thus benefiting from an efficient interface.Opera 20+ is merely a Chrome-clone with built in mouse gestures (at least that).
The question is, who cares for that? Who would switch from Chrome? Hard core Firefox users as well as ignorant IE users would not switch anyway.So - no new users to gain from Firefox, IE or Chrome userbase. Alienating and chasing away former Opera users.
Who is left?Secondly, ChrOpera has been out for over a year now and they haven't even managed to implement a working bookmark administration or an interface to their own Opera link to at least make it possible for Opera 12.x users to update.
This is just ridiculous.
The last update logs read merely like engine updates. What are the Opera developers working on? The engine is being maintained by Google. Just recompile with the latest engine is hardly an improvement.Why is it that open source projects manage to implement a lot more classic Opera features and still use fast, modern engines such as Webkit than Opera itself?
After one year, which in software business is a long time, how much has the market share of Opera improved? Depending on the source there has been marginal improvement or a drastic drop. -
kroppy last edited by
I don't understand why few people here are defending devs, are they paid for this? Opera made WRONG decisions, by stripping down everything, that's a fact.
Tell me what do you find so innovative in new Opera to say it's better than chrome or firefox? Even Maxthon is more customizable now.Devs should LISTEN to what users want, and attitude like "they won't bring it back, so deal with it" is just rude.
Do you expect people will stop complaining? Contrary it stirs even more complaints, and those who just can't stand that attitude anymore will just abandon it in the end.