@edmarcio said in Workspaces as separate sessions:
That is how most people see Workspaces... and that is why it was a surprise when Opera released it without that feature.
Really? Have you done any research? A survey?
@edmarcio said in Workspaces as separate sessions:
Workspace should be in different containers (cache and cookies differents) but the same profile (same bookmarks and stuffs of yor profile)... it is like Private Windows works without the Private part and in the same window in a different workspace.
For example: I open page "A", which requires login. I open a lot of subpages of the "A" page and move some of them to the "Temporary" workspace because in the view of the first workspace they would simply disturb me. When I want to go back to one of the "Temporary" pages for a while, I will suddenly not be logged in? It's just stupid.
@edmarcio said in Workspaces as separate sessions:
Workspace School: you use your school credentials to logins on sites
Workspace Personal: you use your personal credentials to logins on sites
Workspace Work: you use your work credentials to logins on sites
And that's exactly why workspaces were created. To categorize pages in tabs. And only for that. You want separate login/cookie sessions - open a new profile. But you don't really need separate profiles to open "A", "B" and "C" pages from the "Work" workspace and for example "D" and "E" pages from the "Personal" workspace. Just side A-C and D-E
keep in separate workspaces.
Why do you need different cookie sessions in separate workspaces? Can't you just open and store different pages in separate themed workspaces?
Isn't it easier to have several profiles in one Opera installation in which 100% everything can be set in a completely different way?
I use Opera in the portable version myself and in the directories it looks like this:
...\Opera - "installation" files of the program
But:
...\Opera\profile - this is the profile directory.
If I turn off Opera, rename "profile" to any other name (e.g. "profile test") and start Opera then Opera will create a new "profile" directory,
so it will look like a freshly installed program. But if I close Opera again, delete "profiles" and rename the "profile test" directory to "profiles" and re-enable Opera, it will return to the previous Opera configuration.
It's not easier to have "profiles" directory instead of "profiles #1", "profiles #2",
"profile #3" etc and in each have 100% freedom to configure Opera?