From Opera 12 to 20...a giant leap back for mankind
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A Former User last edited by
@colej2000
He's well known for being abusive towards anyone who criticises Opera whether warrants or not
If you mean me, I am well-known for being critical of the potty-mouthed losers and whiners who troll these forums, and who cannot make any constructive criticism without profanity, shouting, or ranting.
Polite users who need some help getting to grips with changes new versions will always get at least some help from me, even if it's just a link to a previous thread, or advice to search first for previous answers before posting.See what I mean, no one can say I wasn't 100% correct about him. You should all be asking yourselves how he can keep getting away with being obtuse to people here
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A Former User last edited by
@colej2000
See what I mean
You are obviously completely clueless — you are 100% wrong about me.
First you lie that I am abusive to anyone who criticises Opera — I am not. I criticise people who use foul language, who rant, and whine. Constructive criticism is welcome — it helps to fix problems and improve Opera. However, profanity, SHOUTING, and abuse of the developers or other users is not welcome here. It muddies the waters when users come here looking for help.
Obtuseness is the last thing I can be accused of. I might be accused of being too blunt.
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biggerabalone last edited by
I also just switched from 12 to 20 and am very disappointed, too! There are too many customisation possibilities missing.
Immediately after starting my first session I realized two great functionalities just disappeared. And I hardly think they are extremely hard to implement again.
First, I may be blind, but the very useful bin on the right upper corner is missing. Second, Opera 12 was able to block 100% of any pop-ups. Now I have to deal with pop-up ads again, even when the pop-up blocker is switched on! I could go on criticising for hours...
I have to agree to another thread OLD IS GOLD in that case. All of the functionalities from 12 should be implemented in 20. With this version 20 you can just switch to Firefox or Chrome and be done with it...its getting better. you should compare the differences from 15 to 20. it'll be even better at 30. give it time:)
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jay1sthill last edited by
Dear Pesala,
my beloved set of 12'16 is getting a bit slow now; I tolerate some old quirks
but definitely will keep sticking to my bunch of shiny "Rolls Royces" in the lot.I hope desperately they will be maintained, until "20" gets
all the gauges, handles and knobs under the hood a serious working tool deserves IMHO.
For instance: opera:config, bookmarks manager, zoom-slider,
tools to arrange bars and buttons. After all: This is the desktop version.I propose strongly A) plain text towards community and Opera.com might invent the Donate button.
With dedication and respect: JJH
By the way: I gathered some 800 organized bookmarks, 40 on top and 160 on the SD grid.
Felt blindfolded without 'em -
jay1sthill last edited by
Dear Pesala,
my beloved set of 12'16 is getting a bit slow now; I tolerate some old quirks
but definitely will keep sticking to my bunch of shiny "Rolls Royces" in the lot.
I hope desperately they will be maintained, until "20" gets
all the gauges, handles and knobs under the hood a serious working tool deserves IMHO.
For instance: opera:config, bookmarks manager, zoom-slider,
tools to arrange bars and buttons. After all: This is the desktop version.
Of course I appreciate its new, elegant features but fairly not as exchange...
I propose strongly A) plain text towards community and Opera.com might invent the Donate button.
With dedication and respect: JJH
By the way: I gathered some 800 organized bookmarks, 40 on top and 160 on the SD grid.
Felt blindfolded without 'em -
anystuff last edited by
i was using opera since it`s origin.
have no time to write too much...
...sighing...
ill try to stick with 12.16 as long as it
ll kept working at least somehow(((
then...
i`ll be on my way to some other browser...
maybe, firefox will learn to deal with RAM.
maybe, chrome will learn something on how to design UI.
maybe, IE ... well, not a chance.anyway, there is absolutely no circumstances i`ll switch to chropera.
RIP, Opera.
it was nice knowing you. -
Deleted User last edited by
This useless thread should be locked. It's simply a soapbox for whining and discontent serving no practical purpose.
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alreadybanned last edited by
This useless thread should be locked. It's simply a soapbox for whining and discontent serving no practical purpose.
Discontent is what improves a product, sycophants only serve to speed up it's demise
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Deleted User last edited by
You have no idea (as usual) what you're talking about. Furthermore, if you're going to use a "big word" such as sycophants, at least learn how to spell it correctly.
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A Former User last edited by
Nevertheless, this "rumor" appears to be pretty much plausible to me at the given moment
I already explained that the rumor is false, so please stop spreading it. -
alreadybanned last edited by
1)You have no idea (as usual) what you're talking about. 2)Furthermore, if you're going to use a "big word" such as sycophants, at least learn how to spell it correctly.
1)As usual? My account is just over a week old.
2)It's not a big word(only 3 syllables) and that is how it's spelled
3)How exactly is your failed attempt at discrediting me adding to the conversation? After all, you're the one crying about threads like this. Pot meet kettle.Your tears are salty
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Deleted User last edited by
My main concern is that it seems the devs of opera chrome are actually trying to create negativity by not answering posts about simple basic functionality issues and whatnot, I hope this opera chrome is infact made by the team of the original opera and opera mini and opera mobile (not the mobile chrome version) I mean i like opera and would like to stick with it and more than patient to wait till it can be achieved though I really get the feeling that opera pc users were abandoned but rather than getting bad publicity opera devs decided to act like they were trying to continue but the users gave up on them. I mean why is there no presence on the forum if they actually wanted us to believe that they intend to bring back the feeling of opera into the modern version. If opera chromium is not a priority than why create it to begin with are they just seeing if there is an interest if so why not just say so, there are many dedicated users willing to promote the continuation of opera, was opera bought out by an entity that stands to gain from its demise, kind of like when LorealParis bought out Filmation (producers of heman) and fired all the employees shut down he-man cartoon for good.
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blackbird71 last edited by
My main concern is that it seems the devs of opera chrome are actually trying to create negativity by not answering posts about simple basic functionality issues and whatnot ... I really get the feeling that opera pc users were abandoned but rather than getting bad publicity opera devs decided to act like they were trying to continue but the users gave up on them. I mean why is there no presence on the forum if they actually wanted us to believe that they intend to bring back the feeling of opera into the modern version. If opera chromium is not a priority than why create it to begin with ... was opera bought out by an entity that stands to gain from its demise...
Opera ASA is not a mega-corporation, though it is publicly owned by multiple stockholders. Opera's forums have always been constructed around the concept of users helping other users having Opera browser questions and issues. Opera supplies the forum servers, and sometimes their developers will browse through those threads carrying titles that are relevant to their own expertise areas. But the primary forum "help" and responses come from other Opera users... even most, if not all, the forum mods are volunteers. This leads to several observations:
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Opera developers don't exist to defend Opera strategic decisions. They exist to write code, implement features or bug fixes, and follow corporate strategy.
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Thread/topic titles matter. Don't expect Opera devs to waste time plowing through threads whose sole reason to exist is to ventilate criticism of Opera design decisions made a year or more ago, let alone expect them to respond to such complaints.
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Companies don't make major design revisions on a whim, nor turn their operation directions "on a dime". Whether or not "opera pc users were abandoned" in the decision to shift the desktop browser to the Blink engine, the decision has been made and the browser is being redesigned. Opera is not about to suddenly change their minds about that just because of yet one more endlessly repeated complaint. They will watch the marketplace and how those results interact with their plans and strategies.
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Politeness matters. If one wants to get a point across, then they should politely document it with their reasons and suggestions, then supply it to the appropriate place in the appropriate way. Far too many complaint threads are initiated with just plain nasty, rude, and inflammatory posts, which in turn stimulate the flame wars that are seen to soon break out in nearly every one. Why would any rational developer wish to involve himself in any such thread? It would be an utterly pointless waste of his time, since nothing he could say or do would either reverse the company's decisions nor salve the poster anger and rudeness being demonstrated.
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Developers are neither blind nor stupid. They can understand a reasonably well-stated post, but they may be limited in what they can do to respond to a given complaint or suggestion. They write code and have internal input into Opera's strategies and feature development, but they exist within a universe of other developers each having their own inputs and opinions, and all of them exist within the confines of both corporate strategy and the coding limitations of Opera's chosen major code engines.
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albatros48 last edited by
Excellent comment! Not pleasant for everybody, but reflecting the rules of business....
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Deleted User last edited by
Indeed... an excellent set of observations. Thanks for bringing reason to this discussion, blackbird.
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stormvane last edited by
This is sad.
I've been a huge fan of Opera since 2.x or 3.x or so. (I first used it so I could test compatibility of browsers visiting a website I created back when Netscape 2.0 was brand new)
But last night's Windows XP updates seem to have killed the Opera 12.16 I was running. It repeatedly launched directly into "no longer responding" mode.
So I uninstalled and installed the latest from the Opera website. Ver 20.x
I worked with it for an hour, but with the dawning realization that it has been dumbed down to something I can't even relate to. No more "tweakability", 3/4 of the customizing/settings options are simply gone. Name it... all the reasons I used Opera are just absent. No more integrated email client.... no more... well ... looking around... what is left of Opera here? I reinstalled 12.16 but even a clean install is dead... it won't launch.
So I'm back on Opera 20 and the standalone email client and feeling like I've been abandoned. Opera had it SO right for so many years, now this new interface feels disgusting and tacky and unmanageable, like I've accidentally opened IE or some other pariah browser.
So sad.
Disillusioned in Canada
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Deleted User last edited by
You see, Blackbird, how your message goes right over the heads of the cry babies? They simply refuse to accept reality. (sigh)
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stormvane last edited by
The "reality" of this situation is that the user interface/functionality that for many years created a huge fan-base for this product has been pretty much devastated in the new version. All flaming/name-calling belligerence aside, this new product will not retain its oldest and most loyal fans if too many of the reasons for staying with them are missing.
"Cry baby"? Flame on. I never cared about useless content like that. If no one comments about the negative aspects of change, then the impression may remain that it is all good, and everyone will be surprised by an unexplained exodus.
(sigh)