tombert a day ago

I am sure that there are reasons that they cannot easily do this, but I really wish that they'd open source their Presto browser engine now that they've moved to Chromium anyway. I always liked the way that classic Opera made web pages look. Maybe it's just rose tinted glasses but it felt like Opera had a nice smoothness to it, almost like a PDF or something.

If they FOSS'd their old engine, conceivably someone could modernize it and we'd at least have one more competitor in the browser space, though typing this out I'm realizing that maybe that's why they haven't opened it up in the first place.

  • TheAmazingRace a day ago

    I wholeheartedly agree. Presto was very lightweight and, to my knowledge, exceptionally standards compliant as well.

    I think the last version of the Presto engine did have a source code leak, but naturally it's not a great idea to work on it unless you want to catch a lawsuit.

    • tombert a day ago

      Yeah, if the Opera corporation gave a blessing to use the leaked code then that would be great; I'm not going to look at it until I know for sure I'm not going to be sued.

      It's too bad, I hate that we basically only have two browsing engines that people take seriously: Blink/Chromium and Safari for iOS. Firefox is there but it lags pretty far behind those two. Having a little more competition in this space could be good.

      • tosti a day ago

        There's LadyBird, https://ladybird.org/

        • tombert a day ago

          I'm aware, but that's not usable yet in any real sense. I'm glad we're getting another engine and it would be cool if it becomes competitive with the other. I'm just saying that Presto was already competitive with the others before they changed to Chromium, and I wish that they had open sourced it if they weren't going to use it anyway.

al_borland 2 days ago

I have fond memories of Opera. When I migrated off of it to Phoenix, I had a really hard time adjusting to not having mouse gestures. I didn’t know how anyone lived without them.

By the time extensions came around to mimic Opera’s mouse gestures on other browsers, I could never get used to actually using them again.

I was sad to see Opera become just another incarnation of Chrome.

  • matsemann a day ago

    Opera had this feature where it knew what the next page for stuff was, and other things. Not sure if it was a rel link or just some clever heuristics. But browsing BB forums with mouse gestures one felt like a God in how one could move around. Next post, next page, next topic without clicking anything.

  • olejorgenb a day ago

    Opera was by far the best browser for a while for sure. Sad they couldn't keep up :/

    • rplnt 15 hours ago

      It wasn't about keeping up. It was 100% about Google putting billions in advertising and abusing their dominance. Besides legit stuff like paying millions or more likely billions for billboards, spots in tv/radio/etc... there were monopoly "ads" on google.com, gmail,com, youtube.com homepages. And of course the classic of blocking features based on user agent alone, lying to people they need to use Chrome to access a product or a feature. They just needed to manipulate the masses and now almost everyone uses browser from an advertising company and they can keep pulling the rug.

  • xtracto a day ago

    I used Opera so much around 2000. Small things like the X-Z shortcuts and the sheer speed blew me away.

  • drooopy a day ago

    Those gestures have been permanently tattooed into my brain and muscle memory. So much so that I’ve set Gesturefy on Firefox to mimic the same ones from the old Opera browser.

  • Bad_CRC a day ago

    Mouse gestures, download manager, pop-up blocker, TABS in windows 98.

    Ages ahead of other browsers.

  • Terr_ a day ago

    Yeah, I had the same experience with mouse-gestures. I think a lot of the pressure was removed by the rise in consumer mice with "back" thumb-buttons.

  • tsumnia a day ago

    I don't have much to contribute other than HI AL from the MORNING CREW!

  • kome a day ago

    Opera 12 was so good, so fast, on ANY hardware, so innovative, so quirky. When Opera became Chrome-based, I moved to Firefox. I just don’t want Google spyware on my computer.

    • UberFly a day ago

      It's based on Chromium, not Chrome.

  • AlienRobot a day ago

    Opera is called Vivaldi now.

    • spikewall a day ago

      Which is a chrome reskin too.

      • Tomis02 a day ago

        Reskin isn't quite right. Vivaldi offers a ton of amazing features that Chrome would never dream of having. For example, tab tiling is excellent and criminally underused.

      • dismalaf 20 hours ago

        Eh it's got a lot going on... UI has way more features, it's got a built-in ad-blocker, email client, etc...

    • rplnt a day ago

      It's a cool idea, but major bugs are being introduced and then ignored. Virtually unusable and I would not recommend it.

      • Tomis02 a day ago

        I literally can't function on the web without Vivaldi, for me it's the only usable desktop browser. What problems have you encountered?

        • rplnt a day ago

          Switching tabs doesn't work like you would expect in Opera for example. The order of tabs gets shuffled randomly. It's completely broken. I downgraded to a version where it had worked, stuck with that for a while. When I complained about it people usually say "just use it like chrome where you can't switch tabs properly anyway lol". It was reported with the precise version that broke it. Vivaldi team asked maybe twice on social media, but then it was just tumbleweeds. It's 100% reproducible with a clean install, on both windows and osx. I gave up and preach for people to just stay away from that browser.

          • AlienRobot a day ago

            Is this what you're talking about? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1XoTNV1qFY

            • rplnt 15 hours ago

              Thanks Chrome for ruining web in yet another way. LRU is THE default for virtually every windowed and tabbed application, then Chrome comes and fucks it up. Now we have a video talking about a "fix", and likely not a single user in Vivaldi even using the default (because they would notice it's broken). Kinda hilarious.

      • UberFly a day ago

        Not my experience with Vivaldi even remotely.

    • dismalaf 20 hours ago

      Vivaldi is the new Opera (literally same founder), but Opera still exists as Chinese spyware.

      • criticalfault 13 hours ago

        I didn't really follow opera since Chinese buyout and migration to blink.

        any real proof for the Chinese spyware statement? is it really bad?

        is it better than Google spyware?

irusensei 2 days ago

I remember trying Opera for the first time in Windows 98 SE. It was one of those versions that prided itself for fitting on a floppy. I think it was 3.0.6 or 3.6. But anyway I was taken by surprise how good it was in comparison to Internet Explorer which at the time was the only browser I ever used.

  • freehorse 2 days ago

    Everything else after opera dropped Presto and became a chrome clone felt like a downgrade to me. I never got the same feeling of easy of use and control over a browser. I kept using the 12.16 for as much as I could, then switched to firefox. The new "opera browser" now is a different browser just sharing the same name.

    And the beloved opera mini for the mobile was amazing. Back then I would even use it in a vm on my computer sometimes because I had shitty internet (and to use a proxy).

    • stavros 2 days ago

      Vivaldi feels like Opera did (makes sense, since it's the same CTO).

      • lucideer a day ago

        I was a die-hard Opera user when it ran Presto - I tried the Chrome version for a while, & I have Vivaldi installed so I can periodically open it & try it out for a while, but absolutely everything since Opera 12, Vivaldi included, has paled in comparison.

        Opera 12 was instantaneous in everything it did, even with a session with 100s of tabs open (without auto-unloading them in the background like modern browsers do) & thousands of local emails in M2. The instant history navigation in particular is something no modern browser has even attempted to copy, Vivaldi included (likely because it's a core Chromium functionality that would be difficult to override).

        There's just so many tiny details of its UX that were slick & seamless & have been lost. Little things that seem minor but were huge on aggregate like text selection of linkified text - it simply does not work in Gecko or Blink browsers but somehow Presto did it with ease. The page you're leaving remaining fully responsive during navigation to facilitate change-of-mind on mis-clicks, etc. Millions of tiny UX details like this just made the whole daily browsing experience so painless.

        • stavros a day ago

          It really was. I had a computer with 16 MB RAM and Opera was basically the only browser that worked on it. The back button was instant in a way nothing has ever been again.

          • lucideer a day ago

            They had some kind of intermediate representation of page renders that was efficiently cached on disk so that it made zero network requests on history navigation. I suspect this same approach also played a part in facilitating the fulltext history search feature I've also never seen in a browser since.

            I'm guessing with the way web standards have evolved & become more complex this might actually be impossible to do today while remaining compliant - honestly give me non-compliance though.

            • thisislife2 a day ago

              True! Came to post the same thing - one of my favourite feature of Opera Presto engine was how all the websites in your history was also "indexed" locally, so that you could do a simple keyword search on "History" to find the web page you wanted to re-visit. It was fast and accurate and made it a breeze to find any site in that you had browsed and was still cached, and it was an incredibly useful feature.

            • stavros a day ago

              Yeah, I don't know, I don't see how you can't pause execution and store the entire interpreter state and DOM somewhere. Maybe it's just that nobody cares enough to go through all the effort?

        • smusamashah 18 hours ago

          They had funny ads about it being fast. One showed opening a tab vs peeling a potato. Another one was opening a tab vs starting a jet.

          I loved gestures, built in IRC client, RSS reader, notes and the experimental website hosting from the browser. There were many cool plugins too. Did it have a torrent client too? I seem to remember as if it had everything :)

      • freehorse 2 days ago

        I bet it is a great browser, but I did not get the same feel as the old opera at the time when I tried, too many features missing back then.

        Moreover, not using chromium-based browsers is a kind of matter of principle for me. Chromium has been a monopoly for very long, which gives google too much power on how people may experience the web. This was made especially apparent with the manifest 2 -> 3 transition, but it should have been seen as a concern imo since a good while back.

    • mrweasel 2 days ago

      When Opera became just another Chromium skin I switch to Firefox. The point for me was Presto, that Opera was really well put together in terms of UI was just a bonus. The developer tools in Opera was better than what shipped in Chrome and Firefox, so switching definitely felt like a downgrade.

      Someone, I don't know who, but I assume the new Opera, is still keeping the Opera Mini proxy servers running. It show up in our logs frequently enough that we noticed and have special whitelisting for them to byparse some rate limiting.

  • thunderbong 2 days ago

    Vivaldi is it's rightful heir

    https://vivaldi.com/

    • glenstein 2 days ago

      I would follow that Vivaldi team to the ends of the Earth, as nobody ever made a better browser in my opinion then they did with those last versions of Opera before they had to sell (versions 11 or 12 I want to say). But for one thing, which is that Vivaldi is unfortunately also a Chromium based browser.

      Which means among other things that they didn't have the capacity to sustain manifest v2 while Google pushed the browser into v3. And some version of that will be true when Google starts pushing, say, mandatory sign in, or AI powered DRM enforcement, or hard coded browser level warnings to comply with the law if you visit Anna's Archive, or limit your search engines to "safe" search providers from a list provided by Google, or using your location to determine if you're in a jurisdiction that has banned certain xxx sites.

      Love the team, but the world isn't fair. They are the example I keep coming back to whenever I hear people say "Mozilla should focus on the browser!" (as if they don't). Opera is your perfect natural experiment in demonstrating that success is driven much more by distribution monopolies. If focusing on the browser and delivering best in class performance and focusing on core features your users most wanted were the things that delivered market share we would all be using Opera right now and they never would have had to sell.

      • stavros 2 days ago

        Unfortunately, Google very successfully suffocated innovation on the web by throwing billions at it.

        • glenstein 2 days ago

          Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.

      • rplnt a day ago

        Unfortunate that they can't fix tab switching they broke 2~3 years ago. It's fully broken, on every platform, one of the main interactions with the browser. Doubt there's actually "a team".

      • dismalaf 20 hours ago

        > Which means among other things that they didn't have the capacity to sustain manifest v2 while Google pushed the browser into v3.

        No but they did build an ad-blocker right into the browser so the main reason people were against the change doesn't really matter any more.

    • smusamashah 18 hours ago

      Opera was so fully packed with features. I started from Opera 2 or 3 from what I recall and stayed until they became Chrome. No other browser came close in features while being fast.

      They had lots of cool featues built in:

      IRC Client

      Email Client

      RSS Reader

      Note taking (I used it a lot)

      Gestures (those were awesome, I fondly remember holding left then right click and the other way around to move back and forward, but these proved to be a sign of Operas decline, some bugs with them were never fixed while we kept getting newe releases, (remember the potato ad?))

      Sharing local files as a website right from your browser

      They invented tabs

      They might have had torrent support too, don't remember clearly.

      It was fast even with all this.

      Vivaldi's UI is built in JS, it feels slow, all my clicks are slow. I never got myself to using it more than a few minutes.

    • eitau_1 2 days ago

      Then Otter Browser is a bastard faithful to the tradition

      https://github.com/OtterBrowser/otter-browser

      • freehorse 2 days ago

        Looks interesting. Is there a way to use it without compiling it myself? It seems to be somewhat maintained in github but the compiled binaries in github releases or sourceforge have not been updated since 2022.

  • rob74 a day ago

    Ok, I guess that explains the floppy shown in the 1995 "episode". Because floppies were already on their way out by 1995 - you still used them to copy data from one PC to another, but most software came on CD-ROM.

netsharc 2 days ago

Feels as soulless as the Opera that's been bought by a Chinese company to sell predatory lending: https://qz.com/africa/1788351/operas-okash-opesas-predatory-...

  • ramon156 2 days ago

    It hurts me that their marketing worked. Gamers are Choosing Opera GX because its "non bs". There's a ton of fingerprinting data being sent to chinese servers. No one is immune to propaganda

    • alex_smart a day ago

      You overestimate how much the rest of the world cares about data being sent to “chinese servers”, when all this while our data was being sent to “American servers” anyways.

      • afavour a day ago

        I think OP's point is that sending your browsing data to a server, be it American or Chinese, isn't "no bs".

        I see this recurrent feeling on HN that because the US does bad things we shouldn't care about other countries doing the same. I think we should care about all of them!

        • soperj a day ago

          The feeling is that "no one" cares about it being sent to American servers, why should they suddenly care about it going to Chinese servers just because they're Chinese.

          • LtWorf a day ago

            Not only that, USA is far more likely to send someone to kill you than china is. So between the 2 I'll take china (I'd prefer my data to not be sent to any foreign power).

            • tosti a day ago

              Well perhaps today is a good day to die.

      • throw10920 a day ago

        Whataboutism (doesn't matter if another entity does it - if it's wrong, then pointing out another entity doing it is fallacious), redirection, and false dichotomy (you can care about the US and China doing it - for all you know the parent poster was in the EU and does care about both).

        Nobody mentioned the US upstream of your comment until you did. This is obvious propaganda - one of the classic maneuvers in the PRC influence playbook is, when called out on anything, to try to implement whataboutism with the United States (even if it's not relevant, like here, which is equally sad and funny).

        • lmm a day ago

          > Nobody mentioned the US upstream of your comment until you did.

          No, because programs sending telemetry to the US is so routine that and pervasive that we don't even remark on it.

          > This is obvious propaganda

          Now who's committing a whole catalogue of fallacies?

          • throw10920 20 hours ago

            > No, because programs sending telemetry to the US is so routine that and pervasive that we don't even remark on it.

            That's not a valid reason. Nice try, though.

            > Now who's committing a whole catalogue of fallacies?

            Calling a fallacious and manipulative comment that literally follows a country's propaganda playbook "propaganda" isn't a fallacy - it's just true.

            It's extremely telling that you didn't comment on any of the actual points that I made, such as it being a false dichotomy and whataboutism - because you know that I'm right, and so you had to resort to insinuations and redirections yourself. Congratulations, you just proved me right.

            • alex_smart 14 hours ago

              The original comment was neither false dichotomy nor whataboutism. It was a simple point that the rest of the world is already used to their data being snooped by the US government. So apart from US exceptionalism, there is no particular reason they would be especially alarmed by the prospect of their data being sent to "Chinese servers".

        • alex_smart 14 hours ago

          Getting snooped on by the US government being so normalized is obviously not propaganda though? Right?

        • kouteiheika a day ago

          What OP's saying is fundamentally true though? Unfortunately most people don't really care about privacy, regardless of whether it's going to an American company or a Chinese one.

          • bluGill a day ago

            Not exactly. Most US companies have a presence in Europe and so give at least an attempt to obey European laws. While the laws are different and not as strong, the US has privacy laws in place that will protect you. China might have some of those same laws - but they don't apply to the government at all (the US makes some attempt to have laws apply to the government)

            That doesn't mean you should be happy with data in America, but China is worse.

            • gsnedders a day ago

              Last I knew Opera still had a decent amount of engineering staff in Poland, and still had some in Sweden, both in the EU, plus still has some amount of staff in Norway, not in the EU but definitely in Europe.

              That’s not to say their privacy story is fantastic, but they very much still have European operations.

            • alex_smart 14 hours ago

              > US has privacy laws in place that will protect you

              They don't protect us at all. Thanks to Snowden, we all know that the US government has extremely sophisticated and wide-ranging ability to get access to any data we share with American companies.

              > but China is worse

              And why so?

            • mananaysiempre a day ago

              > [T]he US has privacy laws in place that will protect you [...] (the US makes some attempt to have laws apply to the government)

              I believe the US stance is that nobody outside the US is entitled to court relief against the US government regarding their privacy, and nobody outside the US and EU is entitled to any relief at all, even from the executive (the “Data Protection Review Court” non-court, formerly the “Privacy Shield Ombudsperson”). In the EU, there are some protections in some countries but for example the GDPR specifically does not apply to governments.

              I mean, the Chinese government is worse on this, but the US is nevertheless really bad and a number of EU countries also suck to a remarkable extent. Until the US press starts dropping the “of Americans” from their latest surprised-Pikachu headlines on “mass government surveillance of Americans”, I’m unconvinced the situation will improve.

    • anal_reactor a day ago

      I use Opera Mobile on my phone because it's literally the only mobile browser which UX isn't completely botched.

      In Firefox you cannot choose the folder to save files to, which is something I absolutely need because I mostly download porn but once in a while I have non-porn and these two must be in different folders.

      Chrome doesn't support text reflow on zoom. I don't even have a comment because this makes it literally impossible to use desktop view which usually provides better experience.

      I'm not even a power user. These features are IMO extremely basic things. Opera's built-in VPN is nice for browsing Twitter but that's an extra I could live without.

      • metabagel a day ago

        > In Firefox you cannot choose the folder to save files to, which is something I absolutely need because I mostly download porn but once in a while I have non-porn and these two must be in different folders.

        First world problems.

    • brabel a day ago

      You seem to be spreading propaganda yourself by accusing Opera of something I have not seen evidence of. Are you saying this just because the company is Chinese?

      • flexagoon a day ago

        See for example

        https://www.kuketz-blog.de/opera-datensendeverhalten-desktop...

        (In German, but Kagi translate or Google translate work fine here)

        • lxgr a day ago

          Thanks, that's pretty damning, in particular sending every visited domain to the browser vendor under the guise of "safe browsing". Really sad to see a former world-class browser stooping so low.

          And I really couldn't care less if the browser vendor or their servers are in the US, China, or even any supposed "data privacy haven". It's simply none of their business which websites I visit.

          For the same reason I'm not using Chrome, which intentionally kneecaps browser history sync when sync encryption is enabled, effectively forcing users to choose between non-synced history and privacy, when e.g. Firefox manages to do encrypted sync just fine.

          • throw10920 a day ago

            > For the same reason I'm not using Chrome, which intentionally kneecaps browser history sync when sync encryption is enabled, effectively forcing users to choose between non-synced history and privacy, when e.g. Firefox manages to do encrypted sync just fine.

            This is novel to me - what's the kneecap specifically? How do you only kinda sync browser history??

            • lxgr a day ago

              Chrome only syncs "typed URL" (i.e. everything you enter in the address bar/"omnibox") website visits when your profile is encrypted, as far as I remember. "True" history sync is somehow tied to Google's generic "activity sync", which only exists unencrypted.

              For me, this completely defeats the point of having history sync in the first place, so this particular change was what made me switch browsers several years ago.

dag11 2 days ago

How do you proceed? I've tried clicking and interacting with everything I can find but I just see the spinning cassette model. Looks cool though!

  • gempir a day ago

    Check your extensions, might be blocking the cookie banner. For me uBlock blocked the cookie banner. Afterwards it worked just fine.

  • wigster a day ago

    nor me. tried space bar. is it a firefox problem?

    • rafaelgoncalves a day ago

      or an ad blocker, here i had to disable to load the cookies consent window. On Firefox worked better for me here, Chrome had some lag.

  • elAhmo a day ago

    Try holding spacebar or tapping it to continue.

emulio a day ago

I hope Opera will be resurrected on the old Presto engine. It was amazingly fast. Back then, Chromium and Firefox were much slower.

  • orangewindies a day ago

    You can't browse the modern web with Presto. I used to work at Opera and we were sad to switch to Chromium/Blink but a company the size of Opera just didn't have the resources to keep up with Google.

    • criticalfault 13 hours ago

      we were also sad. still the browser I ever used.

      but, maybe the company didn't adjust well? maybe it was a bad time to do this, but ladybird is not a big company and they seem to be progressing well.

f-serif a day ago

Wow, this is pure gold. I skipped first time thinking it was just random page viewers from past.

This is impressive design, presentation and experience.

Thank you for the experience.

  • amilios a day ago

    Yeah I'm really not sure why everyone is shitting on it so hard, I mean it is a cool interactive experience. I understand that present-day Opera has some serious problems, sold to a Chinese company, people feel like it's a separate thing from old Opera, that it's lost its soul, all very fair. But we should be able to evaluate this experience as a separate thing, and it's pretty slick!

elcapitan 14 hours ago

Rather than a rewind to the past, this is ironically exactly the web I've come to loathe, where you have to waste unpredictable amounts of time to jump through hoops of interactive nonsense to get a tiny bit of information from some overdesigned interactive pages. Content that could have been a 5 minutes youtube clip or a couple of links to archive.org.

davej a day ago

I remember using Opera on my Windows 95, 60mhz Pentium with 8mb RAM. I remember the persistent banner ad that was part of the browser UI. I had no problem putting up with the ad because it performed incredibly well compared to IE and Netscape on my hardware. If I remember correctly they were the first browser to support game changing web features like alpha transparency in PNG images.

  • smusamashah 18 hours ago

    They use to send you a custom binary with your name on it in the title bar or something.

unsupp0rted a day ago

Every year snapshot feels like a 3-sentence Wikipedia article and a picture and wav file. Just sparse and as another commenter put it "soulless". Basically Encarta without the heart, and less info.

spikej a day ago

Opera was my secret weapon back in the day: if it worked in Opera, it would be guaranteed to work in Chrome, IE and Firefox. It significantly reduced the browser quirks stuff I'd have to dig into.

Dragonfly was top notch also: one of the best bits was ability to outline all the elements on the page. There were other features too that weren't (still aren't) in the other browser dev tools

  • mananaysiempre a day ago

    Huh? If it worked in Opera, it absolutely wasn’t guaranteed to work in IE < 9 (conservatively; honestly probably every pre-Edge IE). At one point Opera had a more faithful CSS (2) implementation than even Firefox. And nothing guaranteed it worked in IE except checking in IE.

    • spikej 9 hours ago

      I had less "custom" work to do with IE 6/7 if I got it working well in Opera first was my experience...

superkuh a day ago

Opera is not 30. Opera is dead. Opera died and never went beyond version 12.

Serhii-Set a day ago

The image format evolution is equally wild. 1996 was JPEG and GIF only. Now we have WebP, AVIF, and Chrome 145 just shipped JPEG XL decoder. Each format iteration roughly halving the file size at the same quality. Would be curious to see Opera's take on JPEG XL support.

InMice a day ago

I'm quickly reminded how absurdly loud the lowest volume setting is on macs

NoSalt a day ago

I am completely astounded that Opera even caught on, as they were one of the very few companies that charged for their browser.

  • joezydeco a day ago

    Probably because their model let you customize it for the application.

    If you have a Mazda from the mid 2010s, the infotainment system runs in JavaScript on an Opera browser customized for the car system.

jFriedensreich a day ago

Probably the first marketing website ever to feature pictures from rotten.com, i enjoyed it but this was not expected.

la_oveja 2 days ago

is there anything else to it than the cassette 3d thing?

  • PurpleRamen 2 days ago

    Yes, after hitting and/or holding spacebar, something happens, or you change to a new year. Sometimes it's just pictures with some text of whatever was important at that year, sometimes it's animations, sometimes stuff you can interact(?) with. In 1995, there is an old Desktop-PC with Windows 95 booting and starting a modem-connection, and you can type on the keyboard. Pretty pointless, but kinda neat.

  • rpastuszak 2 days ago

    Check your ad blockers. I needed to switch off the one blocking the gdpr consent banner

  • freehorse 2 days ago

    You have to keep the spacebar pressed

    • cubefox 2 days ago

      So it doesn't work on phones apparently.

      • freehorse 2 days ago

        There is a "hold to rewind" button on the bottom in mine (ios).

        • cubefox 2 days ago

          Ah thanks, it was just my ad blocker who blocked it.

      • CalRobert 2 days ago

        True simulation of 1996 browsing

  • lproven 2 days ago

    That's all I see too: an ugly rendered cassette thing I can spin.

    It would be very fitting if it didn't work on Firefox: a sign of the growing enshittification of the Web.

    • freehorse 2 days ago

      I use firefox and it works for me

      • lproven a day ago

        OK. Good to know. Thanks!

        What are we supposed to do, and what is supposed to happen?

alpineman a day ago

MySpace page doesn't have a picture of Tom. Not historically accurate.

dev1ycan a day ago

The last time I liked Opera was before they switched to Chromium, I remember how awesome old Opera + Windows 7 aero was, the entire browser was nearly transparent

ivankra 2 days ago

Eh, marketing fluff. This is more like it: https://oldweb.today/ - browse old web (from archive.org) with old browsers (in Wasm)

A better way to celebrate 30 years of their browser would be to just open source it. Code's been leaked and irrelevant today anyway but still.

Siecje a day ago

I got 1995 but the dial up sound is not correct.

dsrtslnd23 a day ago

turn your volume down before opening...

nice_byte a day ago

sucks that opera is no longer with us. used to be my go-to browser before Firefox and eventually chrome...

self_awareness 2 days ago

Erm, how to "use" it?

Or it's just the cassette thing rotating and that's it?

  • teekert a day ago

    Doesn't work well on mobile, it's all spacebar based (hold and tap).

    • self_awareness 11 hours ago

      I'm on desktop on vivaldi, i'm holding spacebar and nothing happens

jlarocco a day ago

Sorry, but what this is supposed to be. It's just a spinning WebGL model?

I wish they would rewind back to using Presto and being an independent Norwegian company, but I'm sure everybody who made it a great browser back then is long gone.

Forgeties79 a day ago

The 2000 limewire bit was good lol

Flavius 2 days ago

That sure took a lot of work for something that nobody's gonna watch.