The future of browsing: Opera One, the first AI-powered browser is ready for download
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A Former User last edited by
@pkt01 said in
@vegelund why do you keep asking that?
Because I am curious about what user scenario does 1000 tabs.
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Generosus last edited by
Hi @Lenmaer,
We're with ya! We brought up your concern a while ago. It appears Opera One does not meet WCAG (Accessibility) standards.
Opera Developers (and Leadership) have been silent about it.
Cheers
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A Former User last edited by
@pkt01 In this case, wouldn't you be better off with Vivaldi which claims expertise in tab handling even with that number of tabs?
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Hectorman last edited by
@pkt01: the browser is a tool, and you are using it wrong, like trying to drive a nail using a screwdriver, you might do it eventually but not in the most efficient way. Tabs are meant to be temporary shortcuts relevant to your current browsing session. if you want to return to a page visited on a previous session there is a thing called "history" where you con do it so and if it is something really important that you don't want to miss later, there is a thing called 'Bookmarks' where you can store useful links to visit later.
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BDSign last edited by
I don't like the new update at all. It is confusing, not tidy and very unpleasant for the eye. If you switch between the workspaces, you get a stupid intro. Unbelievable, but how can you release such a bad update.
Hasn't this been extensively tested before? Ease of use is definitely something else. I want to know how to undo the update because I don't want to work that way. Otherwise I see myself forced to use other browsers. -
Doluto last edited by
I, and most of the community, hate this new "Opera One" thing, just go back to the old one, it's so much better, or at least remove this round border thing as well as putting the sidebar icons on top as it should be, I'll be leaving and using another browser until it's fixed, Opera has been my favourite browser since 2011 and it hurts me to change, please, give us back our favourite broswer
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ho72 last edited by
My only complaint so far (after about 3 minutes of using the new ONE) is many of the old speed dial tiles don't work and now my speed dial page is 6 columns and 18 rows of unfamiliar gibberish.
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ux90 last edited by ux90
@bdsign I just uninstalled the new version and reinstall the latest 99.x version. Than disabled any update, also in my Firewall. Make sure to backup everything before uninstall. That's it! Cheers L.
Find older versions here:
https://opera.de.uptodown.com/windows/versions -
SeanDutton last edited by
Tabs are microscopic, and as of the newest update Opera crashes when I click on tabs. Shiny doesn't mean better. I've been having to fight this "sleek new UI" the entire time, and the previous version was just better. Every new version is 'different' and adjustment to them is always an experience, but this new trend with companies to think that tiny buttons are sleek and sexy is a nuisance.
Having watched the AIs develop over the last few years, it naturally leaves me concerned about the quality and skew of the articles this AI will be finding for me. Every instance of a chatbot being plugged into social media has so far turned into a nazi, and several several media sites, social media, and companies are embedding AI into their content to enforce a specific viewpoint, which limits the amount of information seen. Yes, this does hint towards the leanings of the programmers and companies, but it also presents an unfair and unbalanced marketplace of ideas. An echo chamber, if you will.
In all fairness, I find it ridiculous that the update 'thanks us' for swapping to Opera One, when it was a mandatory update that forced us to it. Give us a choice to use the AI at least. -
Jaseep last edited by
@opera-comments-bot Was this a bad excuse to dismantle your good, unprecedented and easily accessible ad blocker? because now there's ads everywhere and you don't talk about it. That's scummy as it gets.
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ho72 last edited by
As others have done, I reverted to Opera 99 and disabled auto updates. Maybe I'll check out a newer version down the road. Or not.
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
@antonbelarus Your other comment in this topic is still here: https://forums.opera.com/post/319723
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AJayyyy last edited by
I don't see the need for the extension icon to be moved to its own small box in the search bar, it was perfectly functional where it was and now it's more of an eyesore, as instead of being alongside the other icons like bookmark, download and settings, it's on its own with a purple bar and a line between it and the searchbar's box.
Also:
Did anybody do testing with larger numbers of tabs? I know it's not the prettiest thing even in a well-formatted browser, but I'm familiar with my tabs and I used to easily be able to navigate them. Now it's just. Yikes.All I want is a functional browser. I don't want AI integration that I'll never use, I don't want flashier UIs that're distracting and lose functionality, I don't care at all for changing rectangles to have rounded corners.
I'd appreciate if you put development time into fixing issues like the browser conveniently never remembering our preferences when we click "never show again" on the banner ads you shove on our start page, or the website links you shove next to our speed dial. I will go out of my way to avoid those sites out of spite whenever I see things like this, shoving them in my face doesn't work.
I've had lots of people tell me to switch to firefox, might do it now because of this ugly changes.
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SeanDutton last edited by
@ajayyyy Yes! I absolutely am plagued by large numbers of tabs (my own fault for swapping between projects and not wanting to re-find everything), but even the tab groups are so incredibly narrow.
I've run into many of the same issues you mentioned. Is it so hard for companies to just make a solid, stable browser?