Opera 6.0 for Linux Released 424
e1en0r writes "Opera released 6.0 for Linux and 6.02 for Windows today. The new features include cookie management and plug-in support. I've been using the beta release of Opera 6 for a while now and it's great."
Java (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Java (Score:2, Informative)
Title: Opera javascript protocoll vulnerability
Date: [2002-05-15]
Software: At least Opera 6.01, 6.0, 5.12 (win)
Rating: High because Opera is assumed to be secure
Impact: Read cookies/local filestructure/cache
Vendor: Opera has confirmed the vulnerability and released
today a new version 6.02 fixing the issue.
http://www.opera.com/ _ _
Workaround: Disable javascript.
Author: Andreas Sandblad, sandblad@acc.umu.se
Re:Java (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Java (Score:2)
(And depsite how the numbers look version 6.02 is actually older than version 6.0. Folks at Opera have really strange numbering conventions.)
Re:Java (Score:2, Interesting)
This is how it was meant to be! (Score:3, Insightful)
Especially on Linux, there are at least 3 excellent browsers, or 4 if you count Galeon/Gecko as separate to Mozilla, with none of them having a significant lead over the others as far as I'm aware.
This happy situation, with all the browsers competing against each other on a level playing field unfortunately does not (yet) exist on Windows, but lets hope that soon as Mozilla and Opera both improve the market will balance out again.
Hurray for the benefits of competition!
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:5, Interesting)
Among the linux browsers I would have to say I prefer Opera better, mostly because of it's speed - better even than IE. Although the super-small d/l size and it's availability across a wide range of platforms is nice also.
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:3, Interesting)
Although the super-small d/l size and it's availability across a wide range of platforms is nice also.
Wide range of platforms compared to what? Mozilla? Nope. Netscape 4? Nope? Lynx? Nope. I think IE is about the only browser I know of with worse platform support.
Case in point, Linux/PPC is my main platform. Guess Opera just isn't an option for a lot of us.
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:2, Informative)
You have your PPC binaries here [opera.com]. At least it is an option for you.
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:3, Informative)
Uh, they made a version of Opera 5 for the PPC. I expect that a PPC build of Opera 6 will be released shortly.
Here's Opera 5 for LinuxPPC [opera.com]
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:2)
Should I undermind Microsoft by paying for a good browser by a small company, or by using an open-source browser that doesn't cost me or the developers anything? Decisions, decisions....
Very nice purchase model (Score:2)
Re:Not how it was meant to be! (Score:3, Insightful)
The reson they, probably, ignored your request was the fact that you where lucky it ran at all since Opera supports, and strictly adheres to, the W3C's standards. Sloppy HTMl,XHTML,XML, etc is very prevalent today and only recently have company's begin to insist on error-free code - something the rest of the programming world tries to do but most Web coders ignored for years. If you are going to bring up the "browser-blah renders it fine" argument yes, it will and Opera won't because opera doesn't have the same type of error control built in on purpose. Strict standards and no more unsupported tags (Netscape was famous for this) are a must to have a truly interoperable web.
BTW, i am curious to see what you mean by 'loads of sites.' I use Opera excuslively and haven't had any problems for months. Even silicon.com was usable. make sure Opera is set to identify itself as 'opera' and note MSIE or Netscape - sometimes people use activex controls or other unsupported crap which might be what is causing silicon.com to not work.
Re:Ok, just got Opera first time... (Score:2)
Yes.
Putting this in your user css file and setting it up in Opera/Mozilla makes most of the stupid ads on websites go away too:
http://freak.aagh.net/code/user.css
Just in case you need a reason to dump MSIE
Re:This is how it was meant to be! (Score:4, Insightful)
As long as Windows has 95% of the desktop OS market and IE is the preferred browser on that platform, all of the the browser competition on the Linux front is somewhat meaningless.
Not to Linux users.
Also patches some security holes (Score:4, Informative)
Here's the description (taken from the advisory):
Opera allows the location of a frame to be overwritten by an url
containing the javascript protocoll. The javascript code will be operating
in the same domain as the url that was overwritten. Thus we can read
cookies from other domains, local file structure and private information
from the cache (history of links visited).
Re:Also patches some security holes (Score:2)
Opera's release numbers are screwy. (Score:3, Informative)
But at any rate, the upshot is that when he said "6.02" he was actually referring to an older version than the recent 6.0 release, despite what the numbers might make it look like.
Oops - typo (Score:2)
Re:Also patches some security holes (Score:2)
For more info, check out:
http://online.securityfocus.com/archive/1/27258
the killer (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Number of coders (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Number of coders (Score:2)
Of 100 employees (December 31, 2000) 55 worked within Technical Development.
Opera as fast alternative (Score:4, Insightful)
At first I thought that the required ads were going to get annoying, but in truth, they weren't that bad at all. Plus, if I hated them that much I could pay a small fee and get rid of them.
But the best part about Opera is it is the fastest html renderer there is out on the market as far as I am concerned. A second high point to Opera, is that it is completely standard compliant. Unlike some browsers... which one you ask? Um... IE maybe, but that could just be me.
The winner in the pack now has to be Mozilla, but a close second right now is Opera.
opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2, Interesting)
To cut down on annoying "You need MSIE x.x to see this site" messages, I have my Opera set to identify itself as IE.
I wonder how many of those other 94% of IE hits on your site are Opera (or other browsers with such an option) in disguise?
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:3, Informative)
More importantly, Opera by default identifies itself as another browser.
One of the first things I did when I configured it was to set it to identify itself as Opera rather than MSIE. I can't say I've ever felt the need to revert.
I guess I must have somewhat atypical browsing habits, since I can't say I've seen many problems with layout or JS - the worst I can think of from the past month or so was perhaps an offset CSS/Edge [meyerweb.com] style background image [meyerweb.com] on some site, and that's still rendered better than MSIE.
Certainly as a web developer I find I hit problems with MSIE more often than I do with Opera. I guess that's because I'm not a DHTML weenie
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
However, when Opera spoofs IE, it only says:
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
Yeah, all versions of IE after 4.0 identify themselves as Mozilla/4.0
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
NYUHome [nyu.edu] - My university's interface for webmail/file management/various crap. Gives you an error and an invitation to "upgrade" to a supported browser. Works just fine under OmniWeb as long as it is set to identify as one of the "supported" browsers.
Albert [nyu.edu] - My university's system for registering for classes, checking grades, and all kinds of important stuff online. Second only in annoyance level to the phone system that does the same thing (Welcome...to...Torch...Tone...) This thing is so crufty that it barfs under anything but sufficiently advanced versions of MSIE/Netscape. It doesn't even admit that it works under IE, but it does.
I wouldn't visit these sites if it were optional, but there you have it.
Meghan
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
The majority of Windows users I know appreciate how Mozilla and the like are superior, but use IE simply "because it's there" and are too lazy to do anything about it.
p.s. I thought Max Payne was a Playstation game. I'm sure the Electronics Boutique shop my friend works in had a playable version in-store.
Re:opera as big as netscape? (Score:2)
Get a real console. :-)
woo woo (Score:2)
Opera is awesome. I've used Opera since version
3 on both Windows and (lately) Linux. If
anyone else out there is sick of MS bullshat,
think about trying it. The early Linux
versions were OK, but now it is (for me) the
hands-down winner for Linux browser.
<
Opera Interface (Score:2)
I can't wait till moz 1.0 comes out. I am building my grandpa a computer with OpenOffice 1.0, Mozilla 1.0, and Slackware (with windowmaker). That's all he needs.
Re:Opera Interface (Score:2)
If you want to be specific, both Opera and Mozilla copied those ideas from others.
I think Opera's older (Score:2)
Re: Opera Interface (Score:2)
I've been using Opera, with it's tabbed UI since version 2.0, which was, IIRC, c. 1998. So there.
Re:Opera Interface (Score:2)
wrong
"They also were the first with built-in popup blocking."
wrong
Instead of just taking what is spoon fed to you, please try to look things up.
Re:Opera Interface (Score:2, Funny)
You may be right that the other guy's wrong, but I'd personally prefer if you'd also tell us who was first to implement these things.
Even though this is Slashdot one isn't required to be arrogant.
Re:Opera Interface (Score:2)
Actually, doesn't Adobe own the patent on tabbed windows [slashdot.org]?
Re:Opera Interface (Score:2)
Requested popups arn't blocked on mine (Score:2)
Unlike IE with a anti-popup applet (don't matter which), which gives you a prompt whether the popup just poped up, or you right clicked & asked for it.
Does it work yet? (Score:2)
If Konqueror can get it right and Konqueror is free and well integrated with my Linux system, Opera had better do it much better -- at least as long as they want me to leave open source and to pay for it either with my money or with my "eyeballs".
Competition, Schmompetition (Score:4, Interesting)
Making things even more difficult, I have to contend with varying and often non-existant toolbar API's which make things like the superb Google Toolbar and (in my mind) the also superb StumbleUpon Toolbar [stumbleupon.com] impossible to develop for browsers that are not Mozilla or IE.
I think its time to go for a little Darwinian Selection. Survival of the fittest browser. And I think that browser is Mozilla. Its the most full featured browser out there, it's free, it's open source. I had a couple problems with it, I filed bugs, and they were both fixed within the week! I'm having a hard time finding any flaws with RC2, it's brilliant. For all those who are using alternate browsers because Mozilla is "bloated" and "buggy", check again.
Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon [stumbleupon.com]
Re:Competition, Schmompetition (Score:2)
Not to mention that its the web master who do not keep with the standards that are at fault far more often then any browser.
Re:Competition, Schmompetition (Score:2)
That's like saying there are too many makes of car. Nobody says that, because all cars conform to some basic defacto standards in terms of height, roadwidth etc.
The solution is to have much better standards compliance. Mozilla is spot on. Opera I think lacked DOM support, not sure if that's fixed, I'd guess it is by now. KHTML is also pretty good. IE sucks of course, but IE6 is getting there (level 1 while moz crew start on level 3)
Bad Analogy (Score:2)
There is only one solution to this problem, and that is to limit the number of browsers. Otherwise there will simply be too many rendering problems for web developers to worry about, and a bunch of the browsers will get left behind. I do not have the time to test my pages in every browser, and neither does anyone else.
Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon [stumbleupon.com]
Like most shortsighted people (Score:2)
It doesn't. A major piece of Opera's business is embedded space. That their embedded and desktop browsers share the same lightweight core is an enormous boast. Mozilla is too bloated in this respect. Part of the reason it's lightweight is because it doesn't attempt to kludge around the errors of browsers past. It's standards support still remains strong. The only thing seriously missing being DOM support, but DOM usage should be reserved for applications in a closed environment, not the public web in any case.
Opera clearly identifies itself in it's UA string, a knowledgable webmaster can easily deal with that. The UA spoofing is only there for the scarily large percentage of clueless webmasters....
Mouse Gestures In Opera (Score:3, Interesting)
For the uninitiated, mouse gestures in Opera are Palm Graffitti like mouse motions that take the place of button-clicking for some operations. For example, right mouse button+moving the mouse left is like pressing the Back button. Similarly-simple commands exist for maximizing/closing/minimizing windows, etc.
Does Mozilla have similar gesture support? I thought I remember reading about that a while ago, but I haven't been able to find it.
Opera's also very fast. It eats up a lot of RAM by default, but you can edit the RAM cache size in Preferences, which actually makes it run pretty lean (or as lean as you want it to).
The built-in mail reader is quite nice. Fast and simple. The contact list management is nice. It's got instant messaging built-in, but I haven't tried that yet.
Opera does tend to crash at times, but it loads quickly, and when you load it back up it gives you the option of reloading all the URLs it was surfing when the crash occurred. After a crash, I'm up again so quickly that I hardly mind, although it is a bit annoying. Hopefully, this 6.02 release is even more stable.
Well, that's just my two cents about the Win32 version, anyway.
Re:Mouse Gestures In Opera (Score:3, Informative)
Try:
http://optimoz.mozdev.org/gestures/ [mozdev.org]
Re:Mouse Gestures In Opera (Score:2)
In addition, unlike Opera, optimoz users are able to define which gesture does what. Simply edit bin\chrome\mozgest\content\gestimp.js under the Mozilla installation directory and change it as you like. For example, I have "D" (down) binded to nextTab() and "U" (up) binded to previousTab(). Adding new actions is easy too because support for gestures implemented in pure javascript.
Re:Mouse Gestures In Opera (Score:2)
Hmm, I doubt it is faster by much, if it is at all. And with your mouse fwd/back buttons, can you:
- open a new, blank window, in the foreground
- open a new, blank window in the background
- open a link in a new window, in the foreground
- open a link in a new window, in the background
- close a window
I love the gestures, even though when I first heard about them I thought they sounded cumbersome. They really rock. I get so used to them I find myself trying to gesture in other apps. :-)
The choice is very hard now (Score:2)
Konqueror is really great and comes in handy especially when you want to use drag it to drag and drop images or files from webpages and FTP servers because of it's tight KDE integration. I hear they have tabs in CVS now too!
Mozilla 1.0rc2 which I'm currently running is stable, has loads of features and actually works with almost every page (including my bank). It is very rare that this browser crasches. A lot of work has been done here for the past few months.
Opera is the non-GPL browser and I actually try to get away from it a little. But once you get used to the mousegestures and the superfast page rendering it's hard to getaway.
Well, off to download!!
Ciryon
Re:The choice is very hard now (Score:2)
Mozilla _has_ mousegestures [mozdev.org].
As far as superfast page rendering, how much faster than instant can you get??? Maybe it's just the sites that I goto, but I never have a noticable page loading lag...
DOM support... (Score:4, Insightful)
See an example of what I've been doing with Mozilla here [duke.edu]. It's a card game that I enjoy on my Handspring Visor and "ported". Works great in Mozilla, but dies in every other browser I've tried.
Ah well. Go Moz!
Re:DOM support... (Score:2)
Resource usage on Windows: Opera rules! (Score:5, Informative)
In another post, someone is bemoaning how Opera, which previously shipped on a single floppy, has added too much bloat.
Bloat? BLOAT? PuhLEEZE.
Try this on Windoze: from a fresh log-in launch Opera, Mozilla, Internet Exploder and Outlook Express. Then press ALT-CTL-DEL, and click Task Manager, then click the Processes tab. Then take a look at how much RAM each is eating up.
I did this at home, so I don't have the exact numbers handy, but as I recall Mozilla ate about 24MB, IE 7MB, OE 13MB (yikes!), and Opera 6 about 7MB.That's with no sites loaded. Now open up some good, large, complex pages; I tried Slashdot, Salon, CNN, and a few others, the same sites in each browser. In OE, Opera and Mozilla, go sign onto my IMAP email server, just for good measure. Now Mozilla uses 30+MB, IE is up over 20MB, OE is still eating 13MB or so, and Opera is using... about 12MB. Not too shabby.
Now close all the browser windows and log off email. Guess what? Moz is back to 24MB, Opera's back to 7MB, OE still hasnt' changed much, but IE is still sucking down 24MB. Nice garbage collection there, Microsoft.
When you consider that A) Opera provides the functionality of IE *and* OE, and B) some of IE/OE's resource usage is hidden in assorted other "OS" DLLs, Which one is bloated again?
Oh, one last little test... open up a loooong site in each (nice fat thread on Slashdot at Score:0 will do it), then press and hold the down arrow key and see how long it takes to scroll to the bottom. Opera is about twice as fast as Mozilla, and about half again as fast as IE. Add in Opera's industry-best standards compliance and rendering speed, what's not to like?
Missing support for bookmarklets (Score:2)
This is sad because while Opera never supported advanced DOM2 bookmarklets [squarefree.com], it supported simpler bookmarklets better than other browsers [squarefree.com]. For example, clicking a bookmarklet in Opera would not cause the page to stop loading, and changes made by bookmarklets would not be lost after hitting the Back button like they are in other browsers.
Rant: first IE 6 doesn't support [google.com] bookmarklets longer than 508 characters, and now Opera 6.02 doesn't support them at all. Recent versions of Mozilla have a bug where windows created by bookmarklets end up behind the current window (108394) and a bug that prevents the linked-images bookmarklet from working on porn sites (123293). I'm frustrated. Regressions suck.
If only Opera had pop-up management (Score:2)
No, I want real pop-up management (Score:2)
The way they allow you to allow and reject cookies per domain.
Ah, but does it... (Score:2)
Sorry, Mozilla is TOO good (Score:3, Flamebait)
If you have multiple tabs open, and close one, the next one made active is the one last opened. That means that the order can been terribly random. With Mozilla, you close one tab and it takes you to the next one to the left. Quite simple.
Opera's interface has always been bulky, and a bit weird. You have forward and back buttons on the main toolbar, but the stop button (was) only on the windows' toolbar.
Mozilla allows you to better customize javascript permissions, and don't even get me started on Opera's bookmark system (hotlist).
As far as I'm concerned, the only thing Opera has to offer that Mozilla hasn't, is the button to easilly toggle from 'Autor' to 'User' Mode. What this does is allow you on a per-window basis to easilly switch between the colors & fonts the page has defined, and the color/font you have defined. You'll appreciate this if you've ever visited a page with fonts so small you couldn't read them, or page colors that either blind you, or blend the fonts with the bacground so you can't really read it.
I realize that Mozilla eats up much more Memory and CPU power, but that's just something the needs to be gradually improved on. Even as it is, it's requirements fit my machines just fine.
Re:ASP support? (Score:3, Insightful)
One thing that might help is to change how Opera identifies itself. On the version I have, it defaults to IE 5, when I have a problem I switch it to Netscape. I occasionally have good results. The reason for this is sometimes an ASP or PHP site will detect your browser and alter its content based on that.
FYI
Re:ASP support? (Score:5, Insightful)
Except it could be argued, How are we to level the playing field (removing IE-only sites), if we browse pretending to be IE?
Re:ASP support? (Score:3, Interesting)
Opera/6.0 (Windows 2000; U) [en]
Is my current user-agent. If some idiot has created a page and chosen to restrict viewing to one or two of the many browsers availible, you tell Opera to report its user-agent as MSIE, but the Opera string is still there, and will show up in the logs:
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows 2000; U) Opera 6.0 [en]
Knowing the mental qualities of most page-restrictors, this fools their detection scripts quite nicely. This can blow up in your face, however, if the malicious web designer chooses to intentionally exclude Opera, by denying all browsers that contain 'opera' anywhere. I have complained about this to the Opera support groups [opera.com] but they told me it wasn't possible to do a "complete" fake header. If you want that I guess you have to rewrite user-agent headers with a proxy.
Re:ASP support? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Opera may be cool (Score:3, Interesting)
On Windows, Opera beats the hell out of IE even with the 'bloat' that you seem to think taints it. I totally enjoy using it, but I do have issues with its stability. Oh well, maybe in version 7...
Re:Opera may be cool (Score:5, Informative)
The irony of you complaining about the "bloat" of opera, and then state that you're using Mozilla hasn't been lost. That's a pretty funny joke, really.
Having said that, Opera has finally achieved a level of functionality (err, "bloat". Of course a browser that fits on a floppy wouldn't offer the features that customers needed, and wouldn't have any market presence) that makes it a very worthy replacement for IE on the Windows platform, at least: In my day to day use, 95% of my browsing is with Opera 6, and pretty much the only time that I don't use it is when visiting msdn.microsoft.com : Apart from that I've seldom had the slightest problems, and it offers fetures (such as multiple-windows in one host: I love this) like being able to accept/reject pop-ups (or prompt), among a whole slew of "quick preferences". Mouse gestures rock and I find myself trying to use them in IE all the time.
Opera is a fantastic browser, and if anything its time is just beginning. The advertising banner is unfortunate, but for people willing to pay the small price it is tremendous and well worth every penny.
Re:Opera may be cool (Score:2)
Of course a browser that fits on a floppy wouldn't offer the features that customers needed, and wouldn't have any market presence
Speaking of browsers that fit on a floppy, check out OffByOne [offbyone.com]. It's tiny, fast, functional under win32 or wine, and provides the all of the basics. While it's not the most powerful browser out there, it can handle ssl and is extremely slim.
Consider it a halfway-point between Lynx and Opera. :)
Re:Opera may be cool (Score:2)
Anyway, I digress. One thing that made me realise how bad Opera's bloat had become was that this Winder guy had run a whole article on theming and customising Opera. Could you do this from the menu bar? NO! Instead, he recommended you download Opera Composer, a separate utility that would let you create a customised executable with the ICQ/Email/News clients removed, and new skins installed. I'd never heard anything so crazy: you have to make your own custom binary to remove the bloat.
At the time, everybody was haranguing Mozilla for being too slow and bloated, yet here was the supposed champ of lightness and fastness forcing you to get extra programs to slim it down!
I'll be honest, though I use Opera at my college, it's because it's either a choice between that or Netscape 4.7 (ie5 is b0rked). I've been using (well, trying to use) Mozilla since the days of M5, and so could be considered one of the faithful.
I dunno. I still maintain Opera is great in terms of providing choice and competition, and they've certainly introduced some cool features like gestures, but I feel they are being outclassed by Mozilla in particular here.
Re:Opera may be cool (Score:3, Informative)
Actually you can install Mozilla with only the browser if you so wish, or only the email client. You don't have to have any of the extra programs if you don't wish to - try using the Installer builds if you don't believe me.
I see people saying stuff like "Mozilla is bloated". That cracks me up. How big is a Mozilla install? About 18mb. Please compare that to Internet Explorer and yes Opera too, and I think you'll find it's favourable.
Now there is an argument that says, well you don't have to install Composer, but parts of it will still be there if you need Messenger, because Messenger uses Composer. This is a valid argument. But really, Mozilla is not bloated as in physically big. I always have it running in the background with FastLoad (when I'm in windows), and never notice it. I can do this, even with IE loaded.
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:3, Informative)
Opera Software makes it's living by selling ads or by selling the browser. They used to have a time limited trial version, but decided to get rid of the time limit by making it adware.
So shell out the $40 (or less, can't remember), get rid of the ads, and support the company directly if you like the product.
You even get a discount if you purchase licenses for multiple platforms at the same time.
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:2)
[/troll]
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:2)
Not at all... However, I certainly see no reason why I should shell out money for a web browser with nearly the exact same functionality that can be found in other, freely available, web browsers.
Dinivin
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:3, Insightful)
I think he's right. What are these extra features which are worth 39$? I would love to have a reason to support these people but the free alternatives (mostly konqueror 3.0 but I suppose mozilla as well) do 97% of what I need. I really would love to find something to differentiate enough that it's worth +$39...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:A banner in the browser. (Score:3, Insightful)
I do have one problem with the "software should all be free" attitude, but it is that people refuse to see that something which is open source is harder to charge money for since people could pirate it with almost no effort at all, and thus software that is free in the freedom sense of the word yet not free in the gratis sense of the word is rather rare. I can't think of any examples off the top of my head. I was about to mention Linux
distros, except that with them the price they charge is entirely on the honor system. It is
perfectly legal to buy one Redhat CD and install it on 100 computers, then burn a copy of it for your friends to install on their computers. It is perfectly legal to download the whole ISO image and burn the CD without ever even buying one initial copy to start with. The only reason they can make money at the model is because there are enough people that are willing to pay them money anyway even though they are not legally required to to get the distribution. This is because most of their customer base consists of "fans" and others who want to see them do well. That model doesn't work if Redhat use was expanded to the computer using populace at large.
But saying, "these people don't realize that freedom of use inevitably leads to gratis distribtion" (which is my point) is very different from saying "These people are lazy-ass bums who want everything to be gratis" (which is how your post ends up implying things).
Then pay (Score:2)
Re:Opera's the best (Score:2)
This attitude is just why klez.*, the Outlook exploit of the hour, the IIS compromise of the day, is always so effective.
"I don't really care about security. It's so much easier to just keep my head in the sand."
Opera's warning you about that for a reason.
And you want the next version to knock it off.
Why don't you just use IE and get it over with?
t_t_b
Re:great news for nerds like me (Score:2)
But I never take my own advice:
Since when did 6.0 versus 6.02 become "2 version" (sic)?
Maybe only when you're running a Window$ agenda...
I'm surprised you could figure out how to install it.
t_t_b
Re:great news for nerds like me (Score:2)
Which, if you think about it, makes a great advertisement for how easy Red Hat is to install.
Opera's numbering scheme is weird. (Score:2)
Re:MDI Web Browser? (Score:2)
Tough choice for me between Mozilla and Opera. I like the speed (and don't mind paying for it), but it doesn't feel quite as "comfortable" as Mozilla does yet...
Re:MDI Web Browser? (Score:2)
Or even better middle-button click....which for Linux users means both-buttons-at-once. Nice. No shifting required.
Re:MDI Web Browser? (Score:3, Informative)
processes-to-windows is a one-to-many mapping. (Score:2)
Re:MDI Web Browser? (Score:2)
Middle button? I'm using a iBook for fucks sake!
Re:Compatibility (Score:2)
Re:Opera isn't getting my business . . . (Score:2)
I have quite the opposite view. I paid for the Mac OS X version almost immediately after I downloaded it. In contrast, I haven't paid a dime on Windows. When Opera determines the priority of each platform, the revenue from each makes a major difference. If you use and like the software, pay 'em a few bucks. If Opera never upgrades, then they'll never make any more money from you. You see, paying money actually gives them an incentive to improve.
Personally, I'm not conviced that Opera is the best web browser. But, I figure that investing a few bucks in the hope that competition drives innovation is worthwhile.
Re:The Mouse gestures are great (Score:2)
Of course I hear Opera (and the latest Konq) have tabbed browsing also.
Re:The Mouse gestures are great (Score:2, Informative)
Opera's had it for a loooooong time.
TWW
Re:The Mouse gestures are great (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, dear...I suppose that choice of words is yet another way you can tell Opera isn't open-source.
So I assume Opera patented tabbed browsing then?
Re:Features we really need (Score:2, Informative)
If you mean "renders common IE specific quirks" I don't care; if you mean "The full DOM and all of CSS2" then the programmers are saying version 7.
TWW