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Opera has called it a day


tezza

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Opera has called it a day. After almost two decades in the browser business, Opera has officially quit.

The developer announced that it is going to adopt the WebKit engine for all of its browsers on mobile platforms, something not particularly surprising,
but also that it is stopping development of its desktop browser and
will start supporting Chromium, the open source version of Chrome.


Basically, this means that Opera will no longer be developing its own
HTML layout engine, Presto, and that it will slap an Opera label on
Chromium and call that its desktop browser.

There aren't many
details, but what is there is enough to know what comes next. Opera as
we've known it is dead; the move may turn out to be a great one for the
company, but it won't be the same company.

Without its own
engine or even its own desktop browser, Opera is now just another
company that rebrands Chromium and calls it its own browser, on par with Yandex which makes its own Chrome clone, for example.


In the mobile space, it will be just another company that takes the
WebKit engine and slaps some UI elements on top of it. There are now
only four major browser makers in the world, Microsoft, Google, Mozilla
and Apple, and just three layout engines, Trident, Gecko and WebKit.

http://news.softpedia.com/news/Opera-Is-Dead-Desktop-Browser-Replaced-with-Chromium-WebKit-on-Mobile-329052.shtml

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http://my.opera.com/ODIN/blog/300-million-users-and-move-to-webkit

On the same day as announcing that Opera has 300 million users, we're also announcing that for all new products Opera will use WebKit as its rendering engine and V8 as its JavaScript engine. It's built using the open-source Chromium browser as one of its components. Of course, a browser is much more than just a renderer and a JS engine, so this is primarily an "under the hood" change. Consumers will initially notice better site compatibilty, especially with mobile-facing sites - many of which have only been tested in WebKit browsers. The first product will be for Smartphones, which we'll demonstrate at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona at the end of the month. Opera Desktop and other products will transition later.

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This is really sad, I liked Opera allot! Although I wasn't using it anymore because they were going through a path I didn't liked.

I was still hopping they would change something...

RIP Opera :(

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Its actually good news.Problems like website compatibility will be solved.

Will wait for the webkit version of Opera and then decide whether to switch.

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>2013

>Opera has no more devs

>R.I.P in peace :tehe:

holmes_was_like_by_marik248-d34cu56.png

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:(

As I've been saying again and again, you need competition in browser wars. Competition of engine, competition of supporting features, competition of users. They just sold themselves.

You guys think this is good for users? Wrong. This is quite the opposite. With one less (major-powerful) browser gone, Chrome won't have someone who goes to it and says - "I don't have the fastest JS in the world, but I surely give the competition to every browser out there".

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i've used Netscape & Opera many years ago on local area network........

It's time to say bye now, Opera got exhausted.

:huh:

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Good Riddance..

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R.I.P. Opera as a standalone, unique browser. Though I didn't use it much, it was a fast and reliable browser, that had 64-bit support with the final version officially. Now it'll be just an other Chromium clone...

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Once Opera became an organ for social media it may have just as well been Chrome already anyhow.

At v10 I started ignoring it completely.

Their last sane version was v9.23.

Their 'M2 mail client' was pure insanity too.

Opera had some good ideas, but was never really interested in what users wanted.

RIP.

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Opera dies... Shame... I will still be using it tho. Always hated this stupid numerology of Firefox shit... And maybe later on I'll try Chrome.

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Are people misreading what actually happened today with all these "RIP Opera" posts? Presto hasn't been competitive for a while. So they're going to swap it out for Webkit. OK, so beyond increased speed and decreased site compatibility issues, what's really going to change from the perspective of actually running Opera on the desktop? The same features are going to be there. If you use it today, you have no lesser reason to use it then. Unless they put a new skin on it (which they do every couple years), will anyone even be able to tell at a glance that it's any different? So what's all the mourning about?

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