I want the old Opera Presto back....
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A Former User last edited by
i think most can agree that new opera while is up to date, security and all this stuff it is not better than old opera. Fact is whenever I have to use another browser I don't even bother with new Opera just because it says opera. I just go to the most popular browser, chrome.
as for cars not having cassette tapes, they didn't take away a music player, they replace it with something and easier to use. No more tapes getting chewed up in the machine.
Anyway to each his own, we have a choice between old and new for now
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vickyyy last edited by
you know what Opera mini that is a mobile browser still uses the Presto rendering engine. and it is the most popular browser in the mobiles. and there is also a Opera Browser but Opera mini is more popular. and why is that because you know why...
if they can manage to develop two types of browser in mobile apps market than they can also manage to develop two kind of browser for PC.i am really worried about if Mozilla Firefox will drop gecko and start using the chromium rendering engine in the coming future. and they will also say that "chromium rendering engine is better" that's why we dropped gecko.
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canadagoose4ever last edited by
You're not really listening to what Blackbird and lando said so eloquently. While Presto Opera had many unique features, the FACT is that most people couldn't have cared less. That is one of the reasons Opera never gained a better user base than 2% worldwide. Vivaldi and Otter are attempts to appeal to an exceedingly small, so-called power-user group but the truth is the vast majority of users will never bother with either of these browsers and ultimately they will fail for financial reasons. Opera is under no obligation whatsoever to continue to develop the older Presto browser. Deal with it. Move on. As I see it, you have a few viable choices: use one of the modern, UPDATED, secure browsers (i.e. Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Edge) OR continue to use the discontinued Presto browser with no hope whatsoever that it will ever be updated. The engineers that developed it are largely GONE. The reasons for discontinuing it have been stated a multitude of times. Suffice it to say, it was not financially prudent to continue maintaining it - end of story. There are people still using Windows 98 SE and Windows XP because they refuse to upgrade. Neither OS is supported by MS and both are increasingly insecure to use online. But some continue to use them anyway. You're going to experience the exact same things with the older Opera browser as more and more websites refuse to load and security becomes an issue. Do you realize how few people really care about the older Opera browser? Among my family members, colleagues and friends, not a single one uses Opera and my guess is that only a handful of them even know of its existence and even among them there is no interest in Opera whatsoever. Really... you need to deal with facts and stop living in a fantasy world. Opera Presto is dead to all intents and purposes. Use it at your own risk but recognize that it will only continue to degrade over time. Better to move to the modern Opera browser and learn how to make it behave as closely as you can to what you formerly had.
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gcg1000 last edited by
Heck, Comodo maintains two browsers with two different rendering engines! Why not OP? If OP reestablished Presto, I'd be back in a moment! Sadly, dropping PRESTO, which was wonderfully secure, fast and stable, was a stupid decision!
G.C. Griswold
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lando242 last edited by
wonderfully secure, fast and stable, was a stupid decision!
It was not secure, which was part of the problem. It was also rapidly becoming obsolete as the team was having difficulty maintaining the massively complex interface and keep it up to date with web standards. Switching to the Chromium renderer solved the latter problem. Unfortunately the older interface was not compatible with anything but the Presto renderer and couldn't be easily adapted, so it was left behind as well.
I'd be back in a moment!
How much would you pay for it though? They were already having problems maintaining it and trying to do both would probably require 2.5 times the people they have now. The web browser is a very small part of Opera's overall business and its income is very small as it is. If you were going to double (and then some) the price of labor on the thing there is no way it could pay for itself.
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blackbird71 last edited by
...Comodo maintains two browsers with two different rendering engines! Why not OP? If OP reestablished Presto, I'd be back in a moment! ...
Comodo operates from a different business model than does Opera ASA, hence it will balance its development tradeoffs differently. The simple reality is that all web browsers currently are free of charge to the user. How that plays out in a particular business and where that business derives its net income (as it certainly must in order to survive) depends upon its overall product mix and cost structures, as well as upon the expectations of the owners to whom the business is accountable - and no two businesses will go down the same path. Like it or not, Opera ASA has moved on; Presto increasingly belongs to history. Your only choice going forward is what browser you will use in the present and the future.
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gcg1000 last edited by
Well, thank you for all of your responses. My choice is obvious: I'll use Pale Moon (64-bit version) as my default browser.
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sarvok last edited by
if i have to used chromium than i will used Google Chrome. not Opera, not Vivaldi, not Yandex not anyone.
And yet you contradict this statement by using Pale Moon which is using Firefox's engine in Gecko, why not use Firefox instead?
Heck, Comodo maintains two browsers with two different rendering engines! Why not OP?
Because it requires Comodo little effort to maintain those two engines since they are open source being constantly maintained by two different groups. Presto on the other hand is a closed source engine that was maintained solely by Opera which was falling behind before they dropped it and would take very large effort to get back up to scratch.
What you don't seem to understand though is all those features you say you miss from the Presto-based Opera weren't actually a part of the Presto engine itself but rather the browser front-end that uses it, and such features would just as easily work with a different rendering engine in place such as Blink or Gecko which is what the Blink-based Vivaldi aims to do. If they so desired Opera could implement those features into their current Blink-based browser, the question is whether any of the features are actually worth their time and effort, personally the only features I'm still really missing that I'd love to see back are its session management and tab placement options (loved having them down the left side).
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blackbird71 last edited by
...
What you don't seem to understand though is all those features you say you miss from the Presto-based Opera weren't actually a part of the Presto engine itself but rather the browser front-end that uses it, and such features would just as easily work with a different rendering engine in place such as Blink or Gecko which is what the Blink-based Vivaldi aims to do. If they so desired Opera could implement those features into their current Blink-based browser, the question is whether any of the features are actually worth their time and effort ...'Just as easily' is perhaps a major over-simplification of the effort involved. The ease of implementing a feature is dependent on the architecture and API's of the rendering engine, and those are by no means the same for Presto and Blink. Given the architectural process segmentation of Blink and its consequences, some Olde Opera features may be indeed very difficult to create in a chromish browser. That is the reason so many different chromish-based browser brands have similar-to-each-other appearance, "feel", and feature-gaps as compared with Olde Opera. Vivaldi is plowing new ground in attempting to harness CSS and such to create user feature-control of the rendering engine, but it's by no means 'easy' in many cases.
Indeed, the question of which features are actually worth the effort to implement is a business-related decision involving the target user audience and which has to be made by the owners of the development operation. On that, Opera and Vivaldi have different views, and I'll defer to the future marketplace to determine which view will tend to prevail; given that the targeted users are not really the same, perhaps both will succeed in their own realms.
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A Former User last edited by
Wait. Is the right clicks in new opera editable. Right clicking an highlighted word or phrase only gives me a few standard options. What happened to dictionary, encyclopedia,etc. Or an extension can bring this back?