Recommended Posts

Came across this article regarding Opera - appears to be pretty even-handed and has a nice conclusion regarding the price of Opera:

"The only real negative for Opera is that unlike rival browsers, you have to pay for it (or deal with advertisements that become part of your interface). While $40 may seem like a lot compared to free, it's a small cost indeed when put in the context of your entire computing life.

"If you use a laptop, you probably shelled out at least $1,000 for your system. If you have high-speed Internet access, that's another $30 per month or more.

"Adding $40 to significantly improve the tool that lets you experience the outside world seems more than reasonable."

Original Article

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/329269-case-for-buying-opera/
Share on other sites

Oh yes, Opera's cost isn't anything to be bothered about... I mean, it's like buying some clothes at a store... No biggie. However, if Firefox's features along with some of its extensions fulfill a user's needs, there's of course little reason to go with Opera. It all depends on what you need and want to do. But if Opera is obviously better for your needs, the one time fee is very small.

your point is?

586039833[/snapback]

Probably he means that you should drink water until milk gets free... to which I totally agree.

I'm lucky enough to get milk for free from my parants though. Didn't get Opera for free so I use Firefox.

Security.

I was trying to decide which browser so,

I checked out the track record of FF vs. Opera's and clearly Opera had a better record thus far. I found the info on Secunia.

586042902[/snapback]

some people even pay for air :)

well, it was Firebird when i used it the first time and i even tried FF to see all the fuss. the percentage of it working completely to my liking never got met. i always had problems.

if Maxthon had been out before i found Opera, who knows, i may have never bought Opera. i was only looking for something to customize, nothing fancy, but what i found in Opera exceeded my expectations and then some. i will pay until the sun falls for such an awesome product.

  • 3 weeks later...

My issue is that the browsers that are free are worth about as much. Firefox is pretty close to Opera in terms of speed and functionality. But in the end, even Firefox is at most the dim-witted second cousin that no one acknowledges at the family reunions.

I have seen the speed graphs and I know what I experience as a enduser is good and bad. But with Opera and everything else, it is the little things like being able to place the any bar wherever I want, shutdown images at the click of a button/keyboard shortcut (for sites NSFW while I am at work) and the like. The biggest thing would have to be tabbed browsing and mouse gestures. Sure, FF has it but I have tried all the extensions and they do not function as well or as fast as Opera. Opera is like that out of the box. Heaven forbid I get a new workstation and have to reload an extension only to find out that the author has played around with the extension and now it is broke.

Being an artsy-fartsy person myself, skins are ultra important. Do we even need to compare the skins available to Opera and Firefox? If I want a straight black theme with buttons that look good: Opera. What about concrete? Opera. With Firefox, I get very slight variations of the default and nothing radical. Frustrating.

Of course, in the end, it is all about speed and rendering. As a wannabe Web Designer, I trust no other browser to render my work except for Opera. It may be nanoseconds but that is less time waiting and more time working/researching/pr0nning. For me, it adds up.

I am more than glad to pay for software that works the way I want to rather than get some cheap knockoff of the same.

My issue is that the browsers that are free are worth about as much.  Firefox is pretty close to Opera in terms of speed and functionality.  But in the end, even Firefox is at most the dim-witted second cousin that no one acknowledges at the family reunions.

I have seen the speed graphs and I know what I experience as a enduser is good and bad.  But with Opera and everything else, it is the little things like being able to place the any bar wherever I want, shutdown images at the click of a button/keyboard shortcut (for sites NSFW while I am at work) and the like.  The biggest thing would have to be tabbed browsing and mouse gestures.  Sure, FF has it but I have tried all the extensions and they do not function as well or as fast as Opera.  Opera is like that out of the box.  Heaven forbid I get a new workstation and have to reload an extension only to find out that the author has played around with the extension and now it is broke.

Being an artsy-fartsy person myself, skins are ultra important.  Do we even need to compare the skins available to Opera and Firefox?  If I want a straight black theme with buttons that look good: Opera.  What about concrete?  Opera.  With Firefox, I get very slight variations of the default and nothing radical.  Frustrating.

Of course, in the end, it is all about speed and rendering.  As a wannabe Web Designer, I trust no other browser to render my work except for Opera.  It may be nanoseconds but that is less time waiting and more time working/researching/pr0nning.  For me, it adds up.

I am more than glad to pay for software that works the way I want to rather than get some cheap knockoff of the same.

586149751[/snapback]

You took the words right out of my mouth. :yes: :yes:

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Quantum Error Correction Validated in Nature: Microsoft and Quantinuum Log 800-Fold Improvement Two years after the original press-release announcement, independently peer-reviewed results published in Nature on June 10, 2026, have confirmed that Microsoft and Quantinuum achieved an 800-fold reduction in quantum error rates on real trapped-ion hardware — the largest gap between physical and logical error rates ever independently validated.    What Quantum Error Correction Actually Does — and Why Breaking Even Is Hard https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318329/20260613/quantum-error-correction-validated-nature-microsoft-quantinuum-log-800-fold-improvement.htm   Quantum Computing Wiring Bottleneck Cracked by HKU Silicon Carbide Chip at Qubit Temperature Engineers at the University of Hong Kong have built the first cryogenic control chip that operates at the same temperature as superconducting qubits — 10 millikelvin, or just one-hundredth of a degree above absolute zero — without generating the heat that has forced every competing approach to park its electronics hundreds of meters of cable away. https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318325/20260613/quantum-computing-wiring-bottleneck-cracked-hku-silicon-carbide-chip-qubit-temperature.htm  
    • RevPDF 4.5.0 by Razvan Serea RevPDF is a free, fully offline PDF editor for Windows, macOS, and Linux that lets you edit text and images directly inside PDF files — no internet connection, no account, and no cloud uploads required. Unlike bloated alternatives that demand subscriptions and constant connectivity, RevPDF fits in under 60MB on desktop while delivering a complete editing toolkit: annotate, redact, sign, compress, split, merge, convert, and reorganize pages, all processed locally on your device. Smart font matching ensures edited text blends seamlessly with the original, and multi-language support includes RTL scripts such as Arabic and Hebrew. Where most PDF editors force you to choose between features and simplicity, RevPDF manages both. You can build interactive forms from scratch with text fields, checkboxes, and dropdowns, permanently redact sensitive data before sharing, draw freehand on contracts and diagrams, and add custom watermarks — all without a single file leaving your machine. Edit Text and Images Directly Inside PDFs RevPDF supports true inline PDF editing — not just annotation layers on top of a document, but actual modification of existing text and images within the file. A smart font-matching engine identifies the font used in the original document and applies it automatically when you make edits, so changes blend naturally with the surrounding content. You can reposition elements, resize images, and update text across single pages or entire documents. RevPDF 4.5.0 release notes: This is one of the biggest updates to RevPDF yet. A lot of things people have been asking for are finally here. New Features Auto Redaction Permanently redact sensitive text and areas from your PDFs before sharing. Clean, irreversible, and fully offline. Comments, Links & Bookmarks Add comments for review, insert clickable links, and create bookmarks to jump around long documents without scrolling forever. Find & Replace Search across the whole document and replace text in one go. Long overdue. Split Pages Vertically or Horizontally Split any page down the middle, vertically or horizontally. Perfect for scanned books or double-page spreads. New Drawing Tools More tools for freehand drawing and markup, better for annotations, sketches, and detailed notes. Continuous Scrolling in Editor The editor now scrolls continuously through pages instead of jumping between them. Working through long documents is a lot smoother now. PDF Metadata Editor View and edit the metadata stored inside your PDFs, including title, author, subject, and keywords. Better Font Matching Text edits now blend in more naturally by doing a better job of matching the original font. Tabbed PDF Viewer Open multiple PDFs at once in tabs and switch between them without going back to the home screen. Add Links Insert hyperlinks anywhere in your PDF, to external URLs or to other pages within the document. Share & Print Shortcuts Share or print directly from the editing screen, home screen, and viewer. No extra steps. Minor Updates Paste images directly from clipboard into your PDF New image editing tools for more control over images inside documents Bug Fixes Fixed file saving issues on Windows and Linux Everything still works fully offline. No login, no cloud, no account. Your files stay on your device. Download: RevPDF 4.5.0 | 58.0 MB (Open Source) Links: RevPDF Home Page | Github | Screenshots 1 | 2 Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Interesting. I'm not using a VPN with my phone. I tried though my home internet (Rogers) and my cellular internet (Telus) and both trigger the dialog above.
    • Three days after Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5 as the most capable AI model it had ever released to the public, the United States government ordered it switched off — and now the company is refunding customers who paid to use a product that vanished almost overnight https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318342/20260613/us-government-pulls-anthropics-fable-5-offline-now-come-refunds-vanished-ai.htm  
    • Microsoft fired the team and replaced them with AI and this is what you get.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Contributor
      MarkHughes4096 went up a rank
      Contributor
    • Dedicated
      jordanspringer earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      507
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      175
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      139
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      90
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!