People discussing about the best webbrowser.
Otter Browser: "Am I a joke to you?"
Me: "Yes, you are. At least right now. You don't support addons yet. What's the point of installing an Opera 12.x clone then? 🙄"

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from China
seen from Netherlands

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Peru

seen from Türkiye

seen from Croatia
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Austria

seen from Croatia
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
People discussing about the best webbrowser.
Otter Browser: "Am I a joke to you?"
Me: "Yes, you are. At least right now. You don't support addons yet. What's the point of installing an Opera 12.x clone then? 🙄"
Otter Browser - Controlled by the user, not vice versa
New Post has been published on https://www.aneddoticamagazine.com/otter-browser-controlled-by-the-user-not-vice-versa/
Otter Browser - Controlled by the user, not vice versa
Otter Browser aims to recreate the best aspects of Opera 12 and to revive its spirit. We are focused on providing the powerful features power users want while keeping the browser fast and lightweight. We also learned from history and decided to release the browser under the GNU GPL v3.
Otter Browser aims to recreate the best aspects of the classic Opera (12.x) UI using Qt5.
Otter Browser - Controlled by the user, not vice versa
New Post has been published on https://www.aneddoticamagazine.com/otter-browser-controlled-by-the-user-not-vice-versa/
Otter Browser - Controlled by the user, not vice versa
Otter Browser aims to recreate the best aspects of Opera 12 and to revive its spirit. We are focused on providing the powerful features power users want while keeping the browser fast and lightweight. We also learned from history and decided to release the browser under the GNU GPL v3.
Otter Browser aims to recreate the best aspects of the classic Opera (12.x) UI using Qt5.
Otter Browser - Controlled by the user, not vice versa
New Post has been published on https://www.aneddoticamagazine.com/otter-browser-controlled-by-the-user-not-vice-versa/
Otter Browser - Controlled by the user, not vice versa
Otter Browser aims to recreate the best aspects of Opera 12 and to revive its spirit. We are focused on providing the powerful features power users want while keeping the browser fast and lightweight. We also learned from history and decided to release the browser under the GNU GPL v3.
Otter Browser aims to recreate the best aspects of the classic Opera (12.x) UI using Qt5.
Opera(12)
Opera jumped on the Chromium band wagon as of their 15th version release and lost the majority of its community. As a result, most of us Opera fans are stuck on Opera 12, before the troubles came. Well, that's not entirely true. Opera was plummeting in quality long before that, but its conversion to the Chromium engine is what really killed it for most of us. We refuse to update, and most extension creators that I've noticed are also refusing to update. We were using Opera as an alternative to Chrome, and we did not want it to become Chrome.
But I digress.
I'm going to pretend that the latest versions don't exist and do my review on the old Opera. This is the version of Opera that I use.
Opera has the ability to group tabs for greater organization when you have several tabs open. This allows for people like myself to have more control over their browsing. Chrome and Firefox both lack this feature.
Opera has a brilliant side-bar feature that lets you have literally everything you could ever need right at your fingertips. From your bookmarks to your browsing history; from detailed information about a website to a list of currently open sessions; from notes that you jot down while browsing to virtually anything that you decide to include on the side-bar itself.
As a writer, I use the notes feature above the others and I find myself hesitant to switch to any other browsers due to a lack of cloud stored notes. Chrome has several extensions and apps that allow you to take notes and store writings from a cloud (I'm sure Firefox does too), but none of them are the same as the Opera Notes feature. Opera Notes opens in the same tab that you're on and does not use a "sticky note" GUI which clutters the screen. It can be closed and opened again with the simple click of a button and you never have to leave your current tab.
If any other browser had this feature, I would immediately change.
But that's not to say Opera doesn't have any other good qualities that make it unique. It's customization options are far superior to any browser I have come across thus far, and I am including browsers like K-Melon and Sleipnir 2 in that statement. Specifically, you can move any of the toolbars to any location in the window. Whether it be on the bottom or on one of the sides; if you wish it, it is. In that sense, Opera is the Burger King of the Browser Wars. "Have it your way."
But, Opera is far from perfect. Its start up speed is several seconds longer than the typical browser's and it loads pages slightly slower than others as well. Opera is slightly more draining on your machine at times, and is generally imbalanced when it comes to how it actually manages its own resources. There aren't many cons to Opera, but the ones that do exist could easily hinder an impatient person from using the browser.
Le grand comparatif de navigateurs III : Chrome 20, Opera 12, Firefox 13
Le grand comparatif de navigateurs III : Chrome 20, Opera 12, Firefox 13 Quelques 4 mois après le précédent comparatif , le temps est venu de déterminer le meilleur navigateur à l’heure actuelle sous Windows 7. Notre plateforme de test a évolué puisque nous sommes... http://bit.ly/O8inOe