What's your opinion on Opera browser?

I've been using Opera for a few years now and I've been enjoying its features, UI and everything. However, I (surprisingly to me) haven't noticed many people mentioning it. Also, when I was on Reddit and mentioned that I use it I got downvoted which left me somewhat confused haha.

So I'm wondering if there's anything wrong with it and/or if I should give another browser a go (I noticed Firefox is mentioned a lot on here)

Lotsen,
@Lotsen@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Spyware and something a virus will install on your computer. I used it for a while but eventually went back to brave or a Firefox fork.

shrugal,

The Opera of today is not the same as the one from back in the days! The original company sold all their code and rights to a chinese consortium in 2016. Since then it’s basically a variant of chromium, with some propriatary features and tracking added. I don’t know the new owners, so I don’t trust them with my browsing data!

magic_lobster_party,

The original devs of Opera went to make Vivaldi, which is a yet another Chromium based browser.

dizzy,
@dizzy@lemmy.ml avatar

It is yet another Chromium based browser but for when Chromium is needed for compatibility reasons, it’s got some pretty cool features like split panes and mobile sites as a sidebar etc.

Firefox always number 1 though.

Scooter411,

Just curious, what browser do you use?

shrugal,

I switched from Chrome to Firefox about a year ago, because it’s just better for personal privacy and the freedom of the web as a whole. Brave would be my second choice, but FF lets you easily self-host a sync server for all your browsing data.

4am,
@4am@lemmy.world avatar

Brave is littered with crypto and replaces other ad networks with their own (which does tracking basically exclusively for them).

Steer clear, it’s a trap.

Madbrad200,
@Madbrad200@lemmy.world avatar

You can disable Brave ads and tracking pretty easy. A lot of the crypto stuff can be disabled too.

kyub,

Tor browser for mostly anonymous browsing, Mullvad browser as default non-Tor browser (it’s basically an open source Firefox fork made by Mullvad and the Tor team), but I also still have a regular Firefox configured with Arkenfox’ user.js and some important extensions, as well as a Chromium with zero protections except uBlock Origin. I switch between those browsers depending on use case. Each browser has a different theme to make them easily distinguishable from each other, the “insecure” browsers which I only use for rare exceptions (websites misbehaving in any other browser) have a red-like color. All browsers are being run sandboxed.

On mobile: Tor browser, Bromite and Vanadium.

nan,

The original company was sold. Opera Software still makes the browser and its headquarters is still in Norway, but it is owned by a consortium.

Kes,
@Kes@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

There’s not much of a point in the base Opera when Opera GX exists, besides having a less gimmicky UI. If you value your privacy, don’t use it, but if you don’t, it’s a decent Chromium based browser

MelancholikhPatata,
MelancholikhPatata avatar

right, Opera GX is the one Im using, maybe I should have mentioned it. After reading all the comments I decided to check Firefox and Vivaldi out

not_sure,

i stopped using it after learning that it was chinese owned. back to firefox.

wvlotterypredictor,

It’s about the same as any other chromium browser. I prefer brave. Vivaldi’s tiling was cool though.

garrettw87,
garrettw87 avatar

Vivaldi is definitely cool — except for the amount of RAM it uses. If it weren’t for that, I would use it a lot more, but for me, Firefox is just faster all around.

MazonnaCara89, (edited )
@MazonnaCara89@lemmy.ml avatar

Ngl I have tried vivaldi, but I didn’t find the ui intuitive at all, and I have used many browser in my life without any problem.

garrettw87,
garrettw87 avatar

It’s not perfect, but being super configurable does help.

CanadianBaconeer,

Chrome reskin; Firefox and Vivaldi (made by Opera’s creator and former owner) are much better browsers.

argv_minus_one,

Proprietary. Don’t trust it.

excel,
@excel@lemmy.megumin.org avatar

Opera 12 was my main browser until it died and was replaced by a completely unrelated and terrible browser called Opera 2013. Opera 12’s spiritual successor is Vivaldi, and that’s what I still use now.

Vivaldi is the only browser that has all of the UI features that I want… No amount of extensions and customization of Chrome, Edge, or Firefox has been able to come anywhere close to matching it.

AffineConnection,

It’s just another Chromium browser now.

MegaUmbreon,

I loved Opera 20 years ago when the built in RSS reader, email client, mouse gestures and unique rendering engine that was either faster than the others or completely incompatible with websites. Now I don’t give it much thought, all the chromium browsers feel the same.

Hubi,

I remember the mouse gestures, they were a really neat feature. I don’t think any other browser has had anything close to it since then.

MegaUmbreon,

There are extensions for Chromium browser’s that do the same thing now :) I use it at work because my mouse doesn’t have buttons for navigating back and forward, it’s great.

Gurfaild,

There’s also a Firefox extension: addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/foxy-gestures/

Tanoh,

Yes, and it also pioneered many features we take for granted now. Like tabs, customizable interfacez etc.

But now it is just a reskinned Chrome.

magic_lobster_party,

I loved their speed dial when that came. Just having a home page with a grid of your favorite websites was so innovative at the time.

MegaUmbreon,

Yes I forgot about this! Speed Dial was a killer feature, we just take it for granted now.

rumbleran,

Back when they still had their own browser engine it was the greatest browser at the time. HTML5 was rolling in hard and Opera was always the first one to implement these new features. It was also faster than any other browser, had customizable UI (with full MDI instead of just tabs), builtin E-mail client and good tools for Web developers.

But as an open source person using it always felt a little bit wrong, because of it’s closed source nature. Now that it’s just an alternative UI for Chrome and owned by some shady Chinese company I wouldn’t touch the damn thing with thousand foot pole.

SmallAlmond,

Opera is just chromium with extra spyware and shit. Firefox is mentioned a lot because it is foss, and my favorite browser for that matter.

chrizbie,
@chrizbie@lemmy.nz avatar

Sadly this is the truth these days, opera certainly has had it moments in the sun in the past (especially on lower spec devices) but I would personally stare clear these days

Firefox is really the only true alternative

Small shout-out to edge browser’s built in pdf editing functions though, this is really handy on PC at times

BlueFairyPainter,

And Edge’s built-in vertical tabs. They’re so clean and neat and the groups are colored and feel good to use while with most other browsers, vertical tabs feel like a hack, like you’re going against the browser’s intended usage. A year ago you’d have a hard time convincing me to use any Microsoft products but after using Edge at work for a while, I switched away from Firefox on my personal machines as well.

nicerdicer,

Years ago, Opera has been my main browser and I really liked it. Back then, it was the only browser (to my knowledge) that had tabs. It was a novelty back then. Over the time they added more features, like the conversion tool. Then they added more features I didn’t need or want, like the side bar, and it quickly became bloated. I switched to firefox, which offered a greater variety of add-ons. I still use firefox as my main browser. The only thing I miss is the conversion tool. There is nothing comparable like the one Opera has built in. I later learned that the original developers sold it to a chinese consortium. In hindsight, that explains the constant changes to the worse, which pushed me to another browser.

sturmblast,

I’ve tried to use opera on several occasions and it just never sticks with me for one reason or another ultimately I have for more privacy options and privacy focus browsers and those that have abilities for add-ons to achieve even greater security in privacy so Firefox tends to be the direction I go or brave.

hexagonwin,

It has been awesome until 2013 when they decided to make their browser a skin on top of Chromium. Now they had more UI revamps and it doesn’t work or feel like Opera at all. I tried using it sometimes ago and now they even got those weird huge buttons…

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