Opera 15 for Linux?
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demonos last edited by
I've been using Opera since early versions of 3.5 or something like that. My first impression for Opera 15 was - no, sir, no can do
But I tried it.
Well, it's still not the complete Opera for me as it lacks a lot of customizibility. I installed it on Windows7 and I have to admit it's lightning fast, one can get used to it.
Of course I miss a lot of extensions but what I can tell comparing to other Chromium based browser SRWare Iron, it consumes a lot less memory.
Good job Opera team. After all, I think I'll like this new design. -
Deleted User last edited by
I do not have first hand experience with new desktop Opera/Webkit beside one minute poke on Windows release, but I had installed mobile version on S4, and it was disappointing, as ram usage was twofold that of Chrome and there were occasional hiccups (!). This was first time I totally wiped Opera from any of my devices... Probably I will still check it if there will be FreeBSD version.
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Deleted User last edited by
Thanks for reply. One more thing- I don't know how they missed it, but you couldn't choose anything from context menu on mobile version. About ram usage- to be honest it varied wildly, I presume it was tied to "discover" preload. At times it was on par with Chrome...
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latinovicnenad last edited by
Just one question. There will be security support for Opera 12 until next linux version, right?
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linuxmint7 last edited by
Originally posted by destinthegreat:
Opera 17 Stable not Linux version yet
And 19 won't be either.
Just wait, it will arrive eventually.
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Deleted User last edited by
They release version 15, but none linux
They release version 16, but none linux
They release version 17, but none linux
They release version 19, but none linuxThis pattern makes is obvious. It looks like there will NEVER be more Opera for Linux. Least not in the far foreseeable future.
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Deleted User last edited by
http://blogs.opera.com/desktop/2013/11/opera-18-landed/#comment-1132645881
Originally posted by Daniel Aleksandersen, Opera employee:
Do not expect it for another three months at the earliest.
This would literally mean we can begin waiting in about March. If you really want it so much.
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stefaca last edited by
it's a shame, opera devs. are U M$ developers? we are waiting for update for linux and there is no such thing on a horisont
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schnellinger last edited by
Originally posted by stefaca:
it's a shame, opera devs. are U M$ developers? we are waiting for update for linux and there is no such thing on a horisont
And when I say it wasn't a priority, I mean that we didn't even have something that was in a compilable state. A few people had started fixing up the broken code to get something that would compile on Linux in their own free time. After a few weeks of hacking, they were told by management to stop what they were doing and instead focus their volunteer efforts on the project goals, being to ship a Windows and Mac version.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7129955 -
A Former User last edited by
Originally posted by Schnellinger:
Originally posted by stefaca:
it's a shame, opera devs. are U M$ developers? we are waiting for update for linux and there is no such thing on a horisont
And when I say it wasn't a priority, I mean that we didn't even have something that was in a compilable state. A few people had started fixing up the broken code to get something that would compile on Linux in their own free time. After a few weeks of hacking, they were told by management to stop what they were doing and instead focus their volunteer efforts on the project goals, being to ship a Windows and Mac version.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7129955"I wish some former employees would stop making up stuff about Opera. Misinformation always spreads far before it's corrected." - Haavard at Twitter
What's a shame here is some people spreading FUD.
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schnellinger last edited by
Spreading FUD like "There will be a Linux port,someday"
Dream on, fanboy -
Deleted User last edited by
I can't even remember when I started using opera, was way back in the low numbers and I paid to get the advertisement removed.
I could believe when 15 was released that they needed more time for the GUI, but that time has passed now, making a gui in QT or GTK does not take that long, besides chrome and chromium show every day that its no big deal to release for all platforms.
I lost the last bit of faith when Opera 19 has been released that we will see a Linux version. I find it strange as Opera always been loyal to Linux and now that more momentum is coming to Linux (steam, steambox) they seem to abandon ship.
Its a shame but atleast have the guts to announce it.
/goes of looking for an alternative
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A Former User last edited by
Originally posted by Schnellinger:
Spreading FUD like "There will be a Linux port,someday"
Dream on, fanboyIf you'd rather believe andreastt (Andreas Tolfsen, a Mozilla Software Engineer), that's your problem.
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Deleted User last edited by
Since the Opera crash reporter seems to have been disabled (at least for me, asks me send the report but then can't ever actually send a report) I've come to believe that there's little hope for the *nix community and it doesn't help that it keeps crashing more (mostly opening bookmarks) and more and there hasn't been any recent updates.
Even if there's a *nix version I still haven't seen any reason to use Opera instead of Chromium (or even a completely different one like FF or Maxthon, and it seems that there's a couple of new alternatives like Qupzilla and Otter being developed). If someone would explain why Opera instead of Chromium I would be appreciative.
Also worry about the mail product, I know it works but since it's shipped I haven't seen anything about updates, is it still being developed or just stagnating.
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frenzie last edited by
Originally posted by Bill-P:
Since the Opera crash reporter seems to have been disabled (at least for me, asks me send the report but then can't ever actually send a report) I've come to believe that there's little hope for the *nix community and it doesn't help that it keeps crashing more (mostly opening bookmarks) and more and there hasn't been any recent updates.
That just means they won't fix any bugs for Presto anymore (excluding security, for now).
Originally posted by Bill-P:
Even if there's a *nix version I still haven't seen any reason to use Opera instead of Chromium (or even a completely different one like FF or Maxthon, and it seems that there's a couple of new alternatives like Qupzilla and Otter being developed). If someone would explain why Opera instead of Chromium I would be appreciative.
It has
Opera TurboOff-road Mode, if nothing else. -
rbaleksandar last edited by
Just found out today about the removed support for Linux. I was actually wondering for some time why there wasn't a single update. Then today a college of mine told me. I went on the homepage of Opera, went to the download section and compared the last versions there for both Windows and Linux. Imagine my surprise, when I discovered that there is version 19 for Windows and Linux was stuck at 12.16. This is what I'd call a pile of ... . As for the comments that I've read that Linux is not a big enough market I can only ask: what's the market share of Opera overall?! It's definitely far behind IE, Firefox, Chrome and even Safari if I'm not mistaken. So cutting off a whole OS because of "not big enough" is a feeble excuse (besides Linux gets more and more popular with each and every day and the experiments M$ did with Win8 were almost as bad as Vista with the difference that it wasn't as broken as the second since it was based on Win7).
@Bill-P: integrated IRC client, mail client (including an address book), torrent support in the download manager, great integrated feedreader (it's been there for many years and many other browser that include such thing took Opera's example) etc. etc. Chromium is good and I use it as a second browser but feature-wise it is not as good as Opera. And for heaven's sake - the proxy-settings in Chromium are ridiculous. Even if you look at Firefox the user has the ability to configure the browser to use a proxy. In Chromium you have to change the proxy settings of your whole OS in order to use it, which for obvious reasons is a terrible design decision. Yes, there is probably some kind of an add-on that adds this feature (Firefox has it's Foxyproxy extension for switching easily between multiple proxies) but when such basic stuff is missing I do ask my self: "Wth?!". Opera is for user's who want to have many things at once and not a barebone that lacks on basic functionality and has to be geared up. As I said - I like Chromium and it definitely has it's strengths but I choose Opera over Chromium.