I eventually decided to update to Opera 24
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A Former User last edited by
I have been running 12 and 20 ... 24 in parallel for around six or nine months now, and am considering dumping 12. However I would like help to see if any of what I see as shortcomings in 24 are in fact available and I just have not figured out how.
- The old form filler in was a major plus for 12. Good example was logging in to this site. Under 24 I have to type in my eddress, in 12, one letter and one click and its done. This feature came in handy for me multiple times per browsing day - the new 'credit card fill in' is practically never of use to me. Why not both? My only problem with the old scheme was that it did not have as many 'user choice' boxes as I could have taken advantage of.
- I can find no way of requesting a clone of the current window as a new window. (As distinct from a 'new window' - which starts from scratch.)
- Agree with some other comments that a 'delete all private date' option is nice. No problem with the new 'private window' but if you don't do that to start with there is no way of deleting this stuff retrospectively.
- Less critically, the bookmarks bar takes up vertical screen space - which in these days of wide but short monitors is annoying.
Does anyone have any suggestions on recovering these 'lost' features. Thanks if you do.
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A Former User last edited by
And I forgot to add -
5. In 12 you could make your choice of search engine (DuckDuckGo in my case) the default, and delete engines you had no use for. In 24 - nada? -
lem729 last edited by
@petermat
Hide the Opera bookmarks bar, and use a bookmarks manager extension -- I like Chrookmarks for Chrome -- to show the bookmarks (in a vertical display) when you need them. (There are other bookmarks manager extension, that others use, and which may work fine to, for the purpose I have suggested). There's also an Opera extension that's good called "Add Bookmark.". When you click on it to add a bookmark, you can see your bookmark tree and place it where you want. I love being able to hide the bookmarks bar, saving browser real estate, and to be able to show it when I want. You refered, by the way, to the bookmarks bar taking up the vertical screen. You meant, the horizontal screen.
Not sure what you mean about logging in to Opera. Opera 24 remembers if you have logged in, and it should be one click and you're in again. The password manager seems to work ok.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
And I forgot to add -
5. In 12 you could make your choice of search engine (DuckDuckGo in my case) the default, and delete engines you had no use for. In 24 - nada?Afaik on Opera 12.1x used to revert to one of the pre-installed ones.
- The old form filler in was a major plus for 12. Good example was logging in to this site. Under 24 I have to type in my eddress, in 12, one letter and one click and its done.
Opera Blink (Opera 15+) remembers what you type on form fields.
- Less critically, the bookmarks bar takes up vertical screen space - which in these days of wide but short monitors is annoying.
You can enable the bookmarks manager on opera:flags or just wait for Opera 25 to land on Stable stream.
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blackbird71 last edited by
... You refered, by the way, to the bookmarks bar taking up the vertical screen. You meant, the horizontal screen.
It's a terminology thing. Horizontal bars reduce the vertical dimension available for displaying a web page's content in a browser. In popular jargon, that has morphed into the bars "taking up vertical space", which has then evolved into "taking up vertical screen". Referring to either vertical or horizontal screen is fraught with potential misunderstandings. Far better for folks to describe it as reducing vertical dimensions... but that's extremely unlikely to ever become widespread usage.
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A Former User last edited by
YAAAAWN! Do we really need to do this 'I hate new Opera' over and over again? As leushino says the new Opera is here to stay so either live with it or move on to another browser.
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colderwinters last edited by
Maybe this is the Answer, what Opera needed to be http://www.slimjet.com/en/
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Deleted User last edited by
I have no objections to anything that is new and wonderful in O24, I just object to losing all that was really useful in the previous versions. :knight:
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rododo last edited by
"YAAAAWN! Do we really need to do this 'I hate new Opera' over and over again? As leushino says the new Opera is here to stay so either live with it or move on to another browser."
Are you kidding? It is not a matter of hatred, the matter is that I (and it seems that I am not alone) liked Opera 12.17 and I don't like Opera 24. As for now, Opera seems to be just the elder brother of Chrome. But if I wanted a Chrome-styled browser, I'd download Chrome, not Opera!
Now, I don't want to offend anyone. Chrome 24 is more reliable, and I can't deny that; I don't have to reload the pages several times before actually see what I am browsing for, and the notifications on Google+ are displayed properly, as example.
Yet, I can't help but to wonder whether or not a better browsing experience could have been achieved without losing pretty much everything of the old Opera, this is just what I am asking. And, if you think all of those who think as me to be haters, feel free not to comment, I won't be offended by your silence.