Opera 20 - Another unhappy loyal supporter
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DarthMordred last edited by
Exactly. For you, that's the thing to do. Good luck. And maybe after using Firefox for a while -- lol -- you'll have more of an appreciation for the faster Opera 22 (still a browser being refined) but with the world's greatest Speed Dial. Now Firefox is very much an extensions browser, so the exposure you got to extensions with the new Opera should be good preparation for that. I'm not knowledgeable on this HTML 5 ussue and You Tube -- whether Opera is lacking there or not. But you have to decide the feature or features that are important for you
Speed Dial can be purchased for extensions. And there are very useful Firefox extensions that do not have in the Chrome extensions library.
The Opera that made the difference for me were other features that many users have exhibited here in this topic. And hopefully gradually be implemented in Blink engine.
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Deleted User last edited by admin
@darthmordred
Now when I tested Opera 22 on this HTML 5 test, it out-performed Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari.
http://html5test.com/results/desktop.html
And it is listed as supporting the HTML5 video player.
https://www.youtube.com/html5Opera 22 does not support the HTML5 player on Youtube. Is being implemented, perhaps in Opera 23.
And yes, it is an important feature for me.Acctually, Opera 22 suports free codecs such as WebM and VP9 but due to a Youtube's problem (see here) Opera devs made a patch to force Flash Player in all videos. But if you use this extension you will be able to see all videos with HTML5
PS: To use that extension use Opera Add-on 'Download Chrome Extension'
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lem729 last edited by
Speed Dial can be purchased for extensions.>
Yes, you can get speed dials in extensions in other browsers, but Opera's is the best, in my opinion (It's the class of the world). Have you tried making folders in the new Opera speed dial. You drag one link-thumbnail on top of another, and you have a folder. You can use beautiful art as wallpaper (either your own, Opera's, or by right clicking on a jpg you find on the web. Yes, Firefox has more extensions, but it's also slower -- perhaps the slowest of the major browsers. And the new Firefox 29 has been Chromified with its extensions bar of tiny icons.
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samkook last edited by
I'm not sure I would say opera's speed dial is the best(but it is the original one), they all pretty much come down to the same thing.
I'm quite fond of the Super Start extension to have a speed dial in firefox and you can also create folders with it(although I personally find that useless) and there's a nice todo list that can be enabled on the right.
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lem729 last edited by
But you don't like folders (they're useless to you) so touting Super Start is dubious since you don't appreciate the key item -- the folder aspect. Super Start also is a folder animal (and quite good for an extension speed dial), but Opera handles the folders, in my humble opinion, better. In Opera, you can expand the Speed Dial infinitely (with a search engine to find things). In Super Start there is no search engine to find things on the speed dial, so if you add a lot to the Speed Dial, you'll have trouble finding what you want.. In Opera you can have 8 or nine items on a row and it still looks good (and you can customize it further, and have more items). That's because Opera will only show four thumbnails in the folder, so the thumbnails in the folders still look good. In Super Start, it's look bad when you have too many items in a row (because Super Start will show all items in a folder, even 8 or 9 till they look near microscopic). In Opera if you click on a landmark in the Speed Dial it opens in a foreground view. In Super Start, it opens annoyingly in a background view. In Opera, you can go anywhere on the internet, find a jpg, and add it as wallpaper to the speed dial with a right click. And all the wallpaper you have for the Opera speed dial is segregated then, can be found with a right click on the speed dial) and you don't have to go hunting for stuff on your computer to make changes (unless you're adding new wallpaper). In Super Start, you can't add internet art, with a right click action. Nor are speed dial themes (that you have used before) segregated in a discrete location, that can instantly be found with a right click on the speed dial. Instead, you have to hunt on your computer for speed dial art/wallpaper, every time you want to make a change. In Super Start, when you make the folders smaller, the captions because exceedingly difficult to read. Opera's Speed Dial doesn't seem to have that problem. But don't get me wrong. I still like Super Start (for what it is, and it does have some unique, enjoyable features). I just prefer the Opera Speed Dial.
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DarthMordred last edited by
@darthmordred
Now when I tested Opera 22 on this HTML 5 test, it out-performed Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari.
http://html5test.com/results/desktop.html
And it is listed as supporting the HTML5 video player.
https://www.youtube.com/html5Opera 22 does not support the HTML5 player on Youtube. Is being implemented, perhaps in Opera 23.
And yes, it is an important feature for me.Acctually, Opera 22 suports free codecs such as WebM and VP9 but due to a Youtube's problem (see here) Opera devs made a patch to force Flash Player in all videos. But if you use this extension you will be able to see all videos with HTML5
PS: To use that extension use Opera Add-on 'Download Chrome Extension'It did not work. A picture is better than words.
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y288/darthmordred/operahtml5_zpsb2d20123.pngThis problem does not occur in Firefox.>>> Speed Dial can be purchased for extensions.>
Yes, you can get speed dials in extensions in other browsers, but Opera's is the best, in my opinion (It's the class of the world). Have you tried making folders in the new Opera speed dial. You drag one link-thumbnail on top of another, and you have a folder. You can use beautiful art as wallpaper (either your own, Opera's, or by right clicking on a jpg you find on the web. Yes, Firefox has more extensions, but it's also slower -- perhaps the slowest of the major browsers. And the new Firefox 29 has been Chromified with its extensions bar of tiny icons.
Well, the speed dial works efficiently in extension for Firefox. But to come native in Opera, I also think better.
Regarding "Chromified", I disagree. Only the appearance has changed, and there is the option of leaving the old layout. Possibility that simply does not exist in Opera Blink, we are bound to use the layout of Chrome for a long, long time (assuming that we continue to operate using blink). This is a BIG difference.Still, extensions, customizations, bars, menus, etc. still present. And is not that we are complaining about the new opera?
And yet, I have another problem with this engine. What seems common in forum Chrome. What is occasional freezes processing or memory, I do not know. My notebook is a I5 with 6GB RAM. I did not have this problem with PRESTO and Firefox.
Even in changlog Opera 22, there is an upgrade in regard to this problem. I suppose you have tabs for each debt case covers your price. I dont know.
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lem729 last edited by
When I was using Chrome more (back and forth with it and Opera Presto), I had some blue screens, and warnings from Norton that my CPU was almost entirely used by Chrome. I think it's more resource hungry than Opera. Since I started using Opera blink almost exclusively -- 3 months -- I've had no Norton warnings, and no blue screens.
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A Former User last edited by admin
What has caused me disappointment with Opera blink, is the lack of innovative implementation of ASA in OPERA browser. Opera Next, currently is nothing more than a google Chrome, which is updated according to the google browser.
Wrong.My Opera vs. Chrome "comparison": https://forums.opera.com/post/31150
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DarthMordred last edited by admin
What has caused me disappointment with Opera blink, is the lack of innovative implementation of ASA in OPERA browser. Opera Next, currently is nothing more than a google Chrome, which is updated according to the google browser.
Wrong.
My Opera vs. Chrome "comparison": https://forums.opera.com/post/31150I've talked about it. The differences are superficial, nothing that makes a person prefer Chrome to Opera. Not yet. Speed Dial is the only major difference. And an extension easily solves the problem. It is an illusion that Opera is very different from the Chrome browser. Currently it is not, and we have to deal with it. Was the way that Opera chose. That instead of looking for the innovations themselves with own engine, lower costs, leaving all development to other companies. It is a cheaper and less risky bet.
For example, a change that you quote:
"The downloads pop-up is more discrete than the Chrome toolbar downloads"It is irrelevant. Up for what is discreet and what is not is subjective. People are not idiots. Do not call the current operates chopera by chance, there is a background of reason to say that.
When I was using Chrome more (back and forth with it and Opera Presto), I had some blue screens, and warnings from Norton that my CPU was almost entirely used by Chrome. I think it's more resource hungry than Opera. Since I started using Opera blink almost exclusively -- 3 months -- I've had no Norton warnings, and no blue screens.
In my case, when I leave the notebook hibernating. And again I use it, the browser is slow, and need to restart opera, for it to work properly. The reason I think this is a problem that is greatly improved in version 22. And hopefully further improve in version 23.
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A Former User last edited by
@darthmordred you're cherry-picking from the text I wrote. -.- Speed Dial and downloads pop-up are the tip of the iceberg. There are lots of differences you can see if you aren't intentionally blinding yourself.
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DarthMordred last edited by
@darthmordred you're cherry-picking from the text I wrote. -.- Speed Dial and downloads pop-up are the tip of the iceberg. There are lots of differences you can see if you aren't intentionally blinding yourself.
I got an example of a minor change you cited to support your argument.
Counter-argument citing several unimportant aspects between two very similar browsers, and post a link, does not automatically make a valid argument.Deal with the fact that we are all using Opera on Blink sure that each version will have it's own personality.
It's what I believe will happen.We are part of the user base OPERA, why trust it will be the best browser soon.
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lem729 last edited by
Slight correction there, Darthmordred. It is the best browser now even without all the features, and I do trust it will be even better in the future.
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A Former User last edited by
I got an example of a minor change you cited to support your argument.
Counter-argument citing several unimportant aspects between two very similar browsers, and post a link, does not automatically make a valid argument.
They might be minor and unimportant for you, but for me they're significant and important differences I make use of everyday. And beyond that, they show that Opera is not a carbon copy / clone of Chrome like some people mistakenly affirm and that even in small things (and including the big things) the design choices Opera Software make are quite different than Google's team. -
mccujo last edited by
@lem729 The fact that I joined these fora on 24th of May is utterly irrelevant to my user history with Opera. You have made an assumption and accusation based on circumstantial data. I made a statement on my use history; you should pay me the curtsey of accepting that.
@leushino Tell the story as it is, I mentioned this thread in a new thread created with my comment. That thread was closed and I was directed here with, “If you know about that topic than just use it, please.”
Fanboys aren’t the only people be a voice and the right to use it.
Yes, I was disillusioned and expressed my disappointment. Such a position doesn’t exclude me from joining fora. They are the place for discussion, both promoting and dissenting. A wise person will take all opinions and treat them as valuable feedback that shows room for improvement and where things are performing well.
If you had read my original comment, lem729, you would have noticed I did indeed specify areas I felt require addressing.
Leushin, telling someone if they don’t like it, they should leave is a bully’s tactic.
Lem279 and Leushino, you two are members just like the rest of us. Try behaving like it
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blackbird71 last edited by
Many different kinds of folks use computers. Some of them keep everything auto-updated constantly, as much as they can, and stay abreast of the latest version releases to manually update everything else as soon as they can. Others users only periodically check for version status of software on their systems. And still others only check for updates when some news blurb or comment fragment somewhere moves them to. With software as widely distributed over so many years as Opera, scattered users of Presto Opera are still continually "discovering" that there have been radical version changes from Presto Opera with Blink Opera. Eventually those users find their way into these forums to either observe or ask what is going on... particularly so if they find key (to them) usability elements of the browser are missing, hidden, or radically altered. Those users who haunt these forums continually would be wise to remember that.
Both in the old MyOpera and the current opera.com forums, the internal forum search capabilities have some serious limitations... the current one being much worse than the former one, IMO. When a user comes here with a complaint or problem, his ability to find an existing thread on the same topic depends considerably on whether that user's forum search terms match those terms under which existing threads are parsed. The inability to post in an existing thread is compounded when multiple threads exist on a topic, but many or most have been closed for whatever reasons. Moreover, in the various forums I've been involved with, users who are particularly upset or confused about something have a strong tendency to immediately start a new thread, sometimes out of frustration and sometimes because they simply know no other way to express their concerns. As complaint threads are being squeezed into fewer and fewer threads that are allowed to remain open, a complainant's sense that he is being heard is reduced, and the likelihood that he will read all the many previous posts of a long and growing existing complaint thread collapses to near zero. Users who haunt a particular forum would be well served to understand that.
Just because a hundred users have already expressed the same complaint about a browser does not mean that complaint doesn't have validity in the mind of yet another user who has just discovered it and comes to the browser forum to express his concerns. When you replace a familiar piece of software of very long standing with something significantly different, this is exactly what you should expect will happen - and both patience and courtesy should constantly be applied in the face of such complaints. It's been a year or so since the first Blink Opera version was released, and some Presto Opera users are still, just now, attempting to adopt it and voicing their concerns with what they discover. And please realize that this process will still be playing out months and months from now. Again, users who haunt the forums should remember this.
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lem729 last edited by
You said you were a loyal supporter of Opera for 15 years, but I did note that you had pretty much just joined the forum. All I said was, "Welcome to the forum. And where have you been? In your post you referred to "software companies [meaning Opera] needing to get their arrogant heads out of their behinds." I don't think the forum benefits from that kind of crude language.
I agree with you blackbird71. The forum search is terrible. But answering the same general complaint every day -- from people who haven't followed at all the change from Opera Presto to the new Opera (or who just want to complain forever) -- is simply impossible. You're right that just because people express the same complaint doesn't mean it doesn't have validity. But it doesn't make it valid either. Opera changed direction, and some people lost features they previously had. Of course, they can still continue to use the old Browser, so in reality, they haven't lost. Anyway the general complaint about Opera blink has been answered ad infinitum. And having this discussion forever -- about why the move to a new browser engine, and why some features have been lost -- is an act of futility. At some point we have to move on.
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samkook last edited by
A stickied topic(if that's even possible on this forum) with answers to the most frequently asked question would be very useful.
You could just point at it when people constantly ask the same thing and a few of them would read that first.
But with the restriction on editing posts, it's impossible to maintain as a normal user so someone from opera would have to.
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lem729 last edited by
You're so right. On a lot of issues, where a response or discussion has been helpful. And especially given the forum search situation. Put it in the suggestion box. The idea would be, perhaps, an Opera person or moderator(s) can go through the forum to select items for a stickied topic on different subject areas.
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blackbird71 last edited by
I concur that some form of prominent FAQ (sticky or otherwise) addressing the most-often-asked questions or most-often-voiced complaints would be extremely useful, at least until the wave of Presto Opera users testing the waters of Blink Opera has greatly subsided. While, on the surface, many of the voiced issues seem 'politically' charged because of the outspokenness of many posters, there's little doubt in my mind that direct, "neutral" explanations could be created for which features from Presto simply aren't present in Blink, which ones are obtainable in some new way (including extensions) different from Presto Opera, and which ones are still present but now embedded some way within other-named features or settings. In watching countless threads come and go here, I've noted some excellent answers and explanations at times presented in threads, so it's apparent to me that good FAQ explanations can indeed be generated without inflaming poster discontent. The challenge would be in creating it in the first place and then keeping it updated as version improvements impact the explanations.
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alreadybanned last edited by
Pretty much a load of tripe (but why doesn't that surprise me?). The Big Bad USA. The evil MS empire. The good European browser so misunderstood. Oh how wonderful Presto was but sadly... such poor marketing. What utter nonsense. Man do you need to get over yourself and wake up to reality. Thankfully Opera has done just that and it will be much better off for it in the long run ... yes, minus a few thousand whining geeks but with tens of thousands of new "average" users who couldn't care less about all the ultra configurable nature of Presto.
Typical pompous and erroneous response from you and no need to get your patriotic panties in a bunch. I said big American companies, emphasis on companies. Of course it's not just my opinion seeing as Opera themselves complained to the EU about the very thing I mentioned which led to Microsoft being sued for antitrust and the inclusion of the browser ballot box for EU Windows installs.
Opera's desktop numbers have been on a steady decline as well so it would appear that your mastering of tripe is on full display. The future might hold different results but until then your opinion is just that.