Recommended Posts

IMO Opera has the most horrible and non-native interface of all browsers. They really need to work on that.

The only thing really non native about opera compared to other browsers right now is the menus... You are exaggerating quite a bit. Opera really looks quite similar to chrome.

Are you kidding me? Looks like a dog's vomit

You're being an idiot fanboy

Are you kidding me? Looks like a dog's vomit

:rolleyes:

Just to point out, the speed dial can be configured; background changed, tabs removed etc. So all you're basically saying is the aero look (from 7), and the tabs look like vomit. What an interesting deduction. Hell it looks a lot like Firefox 4

And it looks a hell of a lot better than firefox 3 ever did.

:rolleyes:

Just to point out, the speed dial can be configured; background changed, tabs removed etc. So all you're basically saying is the aero look (from 7), and the tabs look like vomit. What an interesting deduction. Hell it looks a lot like Firefox 4

And it looks a hell of a lot better than firefox 3 ever did.

No, remove all that and you got Chrome, eeeep.

The only thing really non native about opera compared to other browsers right now is the menus... You are exaggerating quite a bit. Opera really looks quite similar to chrome.

Try using the Mac OS X version. The menus, preferences window, dialog windows etc. just don't have anything to do with Aqua anymore. And yeah, Firefox and Chrome are crap in this area too. Safari is the only browser that is truly native to Mac OS X.

Try using the Mac OS X version. The menus, preferences window, dialog windows etc. just don't have anything to do with Aqua anymore. And yeah, Firefox and Chrome are crap in this area too. Safari is the only browser that is truly native to Mac OS X.

I don't disagree with this.

IE9 stunning design + Opera speed and smooth scrolling will be amazing :)

...not to say that all bad coding websites will be gone very fast.

In the hypothetical world that Microsoft would even consider buying such a product, you know that Microsoft would just shut down the project, right?

Try using the Mac OS X version. The menus, preferences window, dialog windows etc. just don't have anything to do with Aqua anymore. And yeah, Firefox and Chrome are crap in this area too. Safari is the only browser that is truly native to Mac OS X.

Firefox 4 is much better

Are you kidding me? Looks like a dog's vomit

Oh Gawd, it is ugly.

Are you kidding me? Looks like a dog's vomit

None of your posts are the least constructive in any shape or form. The UI is subjective. Personally I think it has the nicest UI over ff, safari, IE and chrome. With Chromes lack of features and the fact it's slower than Opera pretty much renders it useless. FF I would recommend to anyone who wants to use extensions, but for a mixture of speed and features I would say Opera was the best alternative.

Oh and by the way. There is such thing as "themes" if you didn't know. It means you can change how Opera looks. It's a miracle huh?

Yes, how terribly ugly and unnative this is...

Slapping on an Aero or Aqua theme doesn't mean an application has a truly native interface that actually integrates with the services an OS has to offer.

Firefox 4 is much better

Integrates poorly with Mac OS X' services as well and in the end uses an Aqua theme as well, rather than using the real deal.

In the hypothetical world that Microsoft would even consider buying such a product, you know that Microsoft would just shut down the project, right?

Well said.

I know Opera the browser won't please everyone, but Microsoft buying Opera won't amount to much over acquiring and shutting down a competitor (a small but old one at that).

While you guys are arguing over how Opera fits in on OS X, the Unix version doesn't look native either. Although I find it fits in better with KDE than Gnome. Despite that, on school computers it's more responsive than Firefox at times.

Despite that the Windows version looks pretty polished for the most part. Here's another background:

Speed%20Dial%20-%20Opera.png

I don't use any userscripts, but If I wanted to, I can just append them to the filter. Big ****ing deal, I have to copy and paste a file.

Exactly. It's a "big ****ing deal". It's 2010 and we still have a browser that makes users copy and paste files to some obscure location buried deep within the hard drive to access a feature that is available via point-and-click in other browsers?

I'm trying to decide which is more amazing, that Opera is actually still that primitive in this age of modern browsers, or that you seem to think its perfectly normal.

Exactly. It's a "big ****ing deal". It's 2010 and we still have a browser that makes users copy and paste files to some obscure location buried deep within the hard drive to access a feature that is available via point-and-click in other browsers?

I'm trying to decide which is more amazing, that Opera is actually still that primitive in this age of modern browsers, or that you seem to think its perfectly normal.

Have you realized that 60%+ of the world doesn't give a **** about user-scripts?

And no you don't have to copy and paste it to some primitive location on the hardrive.

OH SNAP!

Have you realized that 60%+ of the world doesn't give a **** about user-scripts?

Users don't care about this, users don't care about that, they just don't use Opera because they're ignorant and misunderstand it, bla bla bla.

And no you don't have to copy and paste it to some primitive location on the hardrive.

OH SNAP!

Except that it's a stupid CSS file that only hides ads, not prevent them from downloading like how urlfilter.ini does.

OH SNAP!

Users don't care about this, users don't care about that, they just don't use Opera because they're ignorant and misunderstand it, bla bla bla.

You know thats a BENEFIT of having multiple web browsers. YOU USE THE ONES THAT HAVE FEATURES THAT MATTER TO YOU.

Did you pay for my computer? No. Did you pay for my windows? No. I don't give a **** about your browsing habits, if you want to run a billion extensions, by all means go ahead. I don't need them, and I don't see the point of them. Hence the whole extension **** is useless for me.

And yes 60% of the world doesn't use user-scripts, because they use IE. And I'm also quite sure a lot of chrome, firefox, Opera, and Safari users don't use them either.

Except that it's a stupid CSS file that only hides ads, not prevent them from downloading like how urlfilter.ini does.

No thats the user stylesheet, not the adblock.

And yes the stylesheet doesn't prevent them from downloading (you need urlfilter.ini for that), but that doesn't affect me too much. I have an unlimited 25/2 connection here, and a 100/100 connection back home. And I have no problem with showing ads on websites that I would like to support. I block the ones that have excessive ads that interrupt my browsing.

Yet again, MY COMPUTER, MY TIME. I'll do what I please with it. Ok?

And yes 60% of the world doesn't use user-scripts, because they use IE.

Rolling On Floor Laughing My Ass Off. Why does Opera bother sinking so much research and brag about how fast its Javascript engine then? Why bother to have so many built-in features? 98-99% of the desktop market don't give a ****, they're using browsers slower than and with less features ootb than Opera. Maybe all browser vendors should focus on the heights of mediocrity of IE6/7/8, that would be what the majority of users want. :rolleyes:

Rolling On Floor Laughing My Ass Off. Why does Opera bother sinking so much research and brag about how fast its Javascript engine then? Why bother to have so many built-in features? 98-99% of the desktop market don't give a ****, they're using browsers slower than and with less features ootb than Opera. Maybe all browser vendors should focus on the heights of mediocrity of IE6/7/8, that would be what the majority of users want. :rolleyes:

Are you retarded? Using userscripts HAS VERY LITTLE to do with how fast their javascript engine is. A HUGE part of the web uses javascript, especially when it comes to interactive content like AJAX. Having a faster JS engine means those webpages load and respond faster not because userscripts can be run.

And like I said THE BENEFIT OF HAVING CHOICE IN THE BROWSER MARKET IS YOU USE THE ONE THAT HAS FEATURES YOU WANT.

Want extensions? Go with Firefox

Want speed and great standards support? Go with Safari, Chrome, or Opera

Just want a browser that allows you to read your email? Use any of them, or hell stick with IE8

I mean lets look at some statistics shall we? 500 million people have DOWNLOADED firefox since 2004. 32 million people have DOWNLOADED Greasemonkey. That means a whole 6.4% of people who downloaded Firefox use Greasemonkey. 96 million have downloaded Adblock plus. That means a whole 18-20% of people who downloaded Firefox use Adblock plus (the most popular extension).

Face it. Not everyone, even on firefox, uses extensions.

Are you retarded? Using userscripts HAS VERY LITTLE to do with how fast their javascript engine is. A HUGE part of the web uses javascript, especially when it comes to interactive content like AJAX. Having a faster JS engine means those webpages load and respond faster not because userscripts can be run.

And like I said THE BENEFIT OF HAVING CHOICE IN THE BROWSER MARKET IS YOU USE THE ONE THAT HAS FEATURES YOU WANT.

Want extensions? Go with Firefox

Want speed and great standards support? Go with Safari, Chrome, or Opera

Just want a browser that allows you to read your email? Use any of them, or hell stick with IE8

I mean lets look at some statistics shall we? 500 million people have DOWNLOADED firefox since 2004. 32 million people have DOWNLOADED Greasemonkey. That means a whole 6.4% of people who downloaded Firefox use Greasemonkey. 96 million have downloaded Adblock plus. That means a whole 18-20% of people who downloaded Firefox user Adblock plus (the most popular extension).

Face it. Not everyone, even on firefox, uses extensions.

Are YOU retarded? When did I say that using user scripts had anything to do with how fast the Javascript engine is? All I was saying was that if you claim that 60% of people don't care about feature X because they're on IE and IE doesn't have it, then why on earth is Opera wasting its time developing all sorts of features not found in IE?

According to you Opera shouldn't have improved its JS engine and developed all its features, it should just become an IE clone because thats what 60% of desktop users care about. I don't care much for Opera, but even I think that's completely retarded. Your logic sir is utter crap.

Are YOU retarded? When did I say that using user scripts had anything to do with how fast the Javascript engine is? All I was saying was that if you claim that 60% of people don't care about feature X because they're on IE and IE doesn't have it, then why on earth is Opera wasting its time developing all sorts of features not found in IE?

According to you Opera shouldn't have improved its JS engine and developed all its features, it should just become an IE clone because thats what 60% of desktop users care about. I don't care much for Opera, but even I think that's completely retarded. Your logic sir is utter crap.

You don't get it do you?

NOT EVERYONE USES EXTENSIONS AND ITS WHY WE HAVE CHOICE

And considering how you didn't reply to that bit of my post, you know the one that includes facts, I'm going to show you another bit of lovely information:

139,270,226 add-ons in use

From Mozilla's statistics. 500 million downloads + of Firefox, only 140 million addons. So that would mean if everyone used 1 extension ONLY, only 140 million people use them. Now considering most people do not just use one, the number drops sharply.

As for userscripts? I'm pretty dam sure even less people use that. So yes MOST PEOPLE DON'T USE USER-SCRIPTS.

THAT IS MY POINT. And considering you didn't manage to get that, and just replied with a personal attack...I'm going to guess your age as being 5. Isn't it past your bed time yet?

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Google adds built-in computer control to Gemini 3.5 flash by Karthik Mudaliar Google has added Computer Use as a built-in tool in Gemini 3.5 Flash, giving developers a single model that can reason about a task and operate graphical interfaces across browsers, mobile devices, and desktop environments. The feature is available through the Gemini API and Google’s Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, although it remains a preview feature for now. Computer Use enables an AI agent to examine screenshots and return actions such as mouse clicks, scrolling, and keyboard input. A developer’s application must execute those actions, capture the resulting screen, and send it back to Gemini, creating a continuous loop until the task is completed. Google says the integration can be used for activities including repetitive form filling, application testing, research across multiple websites, and longer enterprise workflows. Gemini 3.5 Flash can work with browser, mobile, and desktop environments, whereas Google’s earlier standalone Computer Use model was primarily positioned around browser interaction. The main change is consolidation. Computer control was previously offered through the separate Gemini 2.5 Computer Use preview model. As Neowin reported when that model was introduced, it was designed to interpret a visual interface and generate actions without requiring a website-specific API. Google later brought Computer Use to preview versions of Gemini 3 Pro and Gemini 3 Flash in January 2026. The latest release now incorporates the tool into the stable Gemini 3.5 Flash model rather than requiring developers to select a specialized model solely for interface automation. Gemini 3.5 Flash itself was announced in May as Google’s latest fast model for coding and multi-step agent workflows. It supports a one-million-token input context window and up to 65,000 output tokens, along with adjustable thinking levels that let developers trade additional reasoning for lower latency and cost. Google also added that Gemini 3.5 Flash received targeted adversarial training for computer-use scenarios. The company is also offering safeguards that can require user confirmation before sensitive or irreversible actions and automatically stop a workflow when suspected prompt injection is detected. Its developer documentation describes configurable protections for areas such as financial transactions and changes to sensitive records. Google isn't the first to bring Computer Use to its platform. Anthropic has made computer control available through Claude, while OpenAI has continued improving computer-use performance in its recent models. Microsoft has also applied the concept to business workflows, including a Computer Use capability for the Researcher agent in Microsoft 365 Copilot.
    • After I installed KB5095093, the volume on my ARM laptop won't go above 20%. It's stuck on the hearing protection level, which is pretty much useless if you want to listen to anything. I rolled back.
    • Amazon Prime Day slashes Samsung's newest Galaxy Watch Ultra by 45 percent by Karthik Mudaliar Samsung’s flagship Android smartwatch has received one of its steepest Prime Day cuts. Amazon has dropped the 2025 Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra in Titanium Blue to $357.24, saving buyers around $292 from its $649.99 list price. That's a 45 percent discount (purchase link below). The 47mm Galaxy Watch Ultra uses a titanium casing and a 1.5-inch Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 480 x 480 and peak brightness of 3,000 nits. It includes LTE connectivity, Bluetooth 5.3, Wi-Fi, NFC, and dual-frequency L1+L5 GPS for more accurate outdoor route tracking. The 2025 model has 64GB of storage, a 590mAh battery, sapphire crystal glass, 10ATM water resistance, IP68 protection, and MIL-STD-810H durability testing. Its health and fitness tools include heart rate monitoring, sleep coaching, Energy Score, Running Coach, body composition analysis, temperature sensing, and ECG support, where available. This model is best suited to Android users who regularly run, hike, cycle, or train outdoors and want cellular access without carrying a phone. The larger battery, rugged construction, bright display, and dedicated Quick Button also make it a stronger option than Samsung’s regular Galaxy Watch models for extended workouts and demanding environments. Grab the Titanium Blue Galaxy Watch Ultra before the Prime Day price resets: Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra (2025) [Sold and Shipped by Amazon] Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • Google begins rolling out its post-Epic Play Store billing model next week by Karthik Mudaliar Google has confirmed that its redesigned Play Store billing and fee structure will take effect on June 30, 2026, in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Economic Area. The changes will let eligible developers offer their own payment systems or send users to an external website for purchases, while separating Google’s platform service fee from the cost of using Google Play Billing. The rollout puts concrete dates and detailed rate cards behind the broader Android policy overhaul Google announced in March. That announcement followed a proposed settlement with Epic Games intended to resolve their long-running disputes over app distribution and payments, although the U.S. portion of the agreement still requires court approval. Under the new billing choice program, developers selling digital content or services can display an alternative payment option alongside Google Play Billing. They may also direct users to their own websites to complete a purchase. Developers can use Google’s standard payment-choice screen or design one that complies with the company’s user-interface rules. Choosing another payment processor does not eliminate Google’s cut altogether. The company will continue charging a service fee for transactions associated with apps distributed through Google Play, regardless of whether payment is handled by Google, an alternative provider, or a developer’s website. Google argues that this fee covers the value and infrastructure provided by Android and the Play Store. For developers earning up to $1 million annually, the service fee will generally be 10 percent. That rate also applies to auto-renewing subscriptions. When Google Play Billing is used in the U.S., U.K., or EEA, Google will add a separate 5 percent billing fee, and developers processing payments elsewhere will not pay that additional charge. This means Google’s familiar flat 30 percent commission is disappearing, but developers will not necessarily see a dramatic reduction on every transaction. An in-app purchase from an existing user processed through Google Play Billing can still reach a combined 30 percent. The biggest savings are likely to come from subscriptions, smaller developers covered by the $1 million tier, and companies able to move customers to their own payment infrastructure. Google is also offering lower rates through its Apps Experience and revamped Games Level Up programs. Apps and games that satisfy the company’s requirements can qualify for 15 percent service fees on new-install transactions and 20 percent on existing-install transactions. The criteria include performance and reliability standards, support for additional Android device categories, and selected platform features. Those program rates are scheduled to become available in the initial markets and Australia on September 30. For consumers, the immediate effect will depend on whether developers adopt alternative payments and pass any savings on through lower prices. For developers, however, June 30 begins a more flexible but considerably more complicated Play Store economy in which distribution, billing, install dates, revenue thresholds, and program participation can each affect Google’s final cut. Google is also separately developing a Registered App Stores program designed to simplify the installation of qualifying third-party stores. That initiative is expected to arrive with a major Android release later in 2026 and will launch outside the U.S. first. Google says the rest of the world will receive the changes by September 30, 2027, although billing rates for markets outside the US, UK, and EEA have not yet been announced.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Rookie
      +ChiefOfNeo went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      464
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      177
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      124
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      81
    5. 5
      Xenon
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!