@egosnitch - more information required, ES.
Are you in Sweden?
Is the issue that you're not in Sweden and that the VPN won't change the country you emerge in?
Do more on the web, with a fast and secure browser!
Download Opera browser with:
@egosnitch - more information required, ES.
Are you in Sweden?
Is the issue that you're not in Sweden and that the VPN won't change the country you emerge in?
@rob-b - 'more information than you thought' and 'too much paranoia', Rob?
Privacy is becoming a very real issue these days - governments tracking dissidents in other countries, detecting mother/daughter presences and conversations when crossing state borders in the USA, the EU looking to tighten use of tracking/identifying cues that the G company uses in its analytics.
We don't publish our names and addresses here, in the same way Mr Zukerberg declined to publish the hotel name and the number of his suite where he was staying when attending a Congressional hearing in Washington, DC, USA.
Colour me curious, but is this an issue - does not the + symbol itself work in creating a new tab?
Maybe my layout is different to others', but with my taskbar at the top (where all the action happens), no title-bar in Opera, and tabs across the first row, the + sits level with all the other tabs - and it works.
Perhaps the Opera fellows can't see the problem.
It's been six years since this question has been ask in a now locked thread, but, personal computing being what it is, it's likely time to check again whether Opera's interface can be set up to a user's personal preferences and manner of usage, or not.
Is there any more flexibility in Opera's layout?
If people are going to transition from another browser to Opera then it really behoves Opera to make the changeover as little confronting as possible; a behaviour verity.
The centre of the screen is the most easily addressed, and that's where I like my controls, Stop/Refresh is one, + and - zoom another, the search field close to those controls, ...others.
Presenting hurdles for possible adopters to surmount is a faulty design practice, IMO.
Is there progress?
Nope, no so, sgh. In all the installs I've encountered over the years, this is among the most obscure.
Go to the landing area of the download page and what do you see? A big Download (Recommended) button.
Take that, and nothing you say obtains.
I see in faint grey small font End User Licence Agreement, Privacy Statement and some other one in the same obscure colour/font, but by that time I've scanned what I've seen, and we all know that we skip the EULA and the legal stuff etc, and on we go.
Yes, I found the other download links lower down on that d/l page, eventually, out of frustration rather than good web design.
I wonder if you had the same perspicacity the first time you grabbed the recommended download. Of course, once you know, you know.
Talk about shooting oneself in the foot... And for a minor browser.
It could be much easier - but I've explained for other readers, nevertheless.
Maybe if you had been around last year, sgh, the world would be a better place. (Is your explanation in the wiki?)
Cheers.
First of all I would like to congratulate zgreenhostz for his equanimity in the face of circumlocutory responses from the helpers here and adding 'LOL' when he was obviously frustrated in having to ask his question many times over. Well done, zgh.
Although I have plenty of other things waiting for me to do, I felt I had to register and post a reply that was only (partly) solved by a moderator's single line post after 21 earlier replies.
Like Adobe, that wants to make almost everything a little different and unfathomable in a GUI environment that is meant to make operations obvious and intuitive [here I am reaching for my mousewheel so that I can see what I am typing], Opera seems to be following the same path: everything is just a little different in its own style irrespective of what users have learned from 45 years of Windows presence on the planet.
The OP was asking how to install Opera in the Customary Way in one of the Program Files folders that every other program uses. The few exceptions that there are prove the rule.
[more mousewheel[ I have spent a good hour (plus this effort) trying to find out how to install Opera64 (launcher.exe, it turns out) where I (and a billion other people) expect it should go.
This insistence on putting its executable in AppData in an effort to simplify installation (to the point of stupidity, imho) is perverse, imho.
Consider this, please: We Are Not All Administrators . For everyday activity I and millions of others work from a standard user sign-in. If anything prompts us for elevated permissions we are asked for an admin password. That's a precaution and a warning. If we want to install a program, we expect the admin password prompt.
All the programs in the world, except one, can accommodate this arrangement.
When I take the offered Opera download and run it, I see that it won't update my Program Files (x86) install from early last year but it puts it in my data folder branch, an executable, that demands no admin permissions.
Try though I might - even by gingerly hovering over a '64' link and downloading the 64-bit 'installer' - it Insists on installing under my username.
I ask the web and the forum how to install Opera normally as a program and I see talk of Options (never seen), offline installers and standalone installers - but no links.
I'm not unfamiliar with these things, but after about an hour and repeated attempts at installing, I happen to notice a tiny faint grey link saying 'Options'!`
There's too much to say about this saga - the absence of 'All Users' under that Options, getting the FTP link, finding the Windows 64 installable, finally running that as an admin from a user sign-in, not being offered 'All Users' during that install, not being given the choice of adding to my (user) menu, being given an Opera icon on the taskbar (unasked), having to create an Opera shortcut in all users' Start Menu Programs folders by renaming it from 'launcher.exe - Shortcut.lnk' to 'Opera.lnk', and finally testing it to see it it picked up my old data/setting and not the admin's from where it was installed.
How hard can it be to do things the normal way, Opera?
I have Nordic blood so I would like to support your efforts rather than those of the unpleasant tech majors - but you do make it very, very hard.
For anyone still after the answer, in part, take that ftp link (File Transfer Protocol) above, click away until you see the Windows 64 link, right-click it and save it, right-click the downloaded file (~60+MB) and 'Run as Administrator'. Look for the tiny 'Options' link and walk around the C: drive to the 'Program Files' folder - Don't Put It There - create an Opera new folder and put it there (the default link to AppData is too long to see that it requires an Opera folder you must choose - and it will install - not Opera.exe per se but an executable 'launcher.exe' that is, unintuitively, Opera.
You'll have to handle your user menu and desktop shortcuts yourself - I have to go and walk the dog, late, after this extended delay.
Good luck.