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Latest Opera 10.5 browser offers improved Windows 7 integration

by Parm Mann on 20 January 2010, 14:25

Tags: Opera (OPERA.OL)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qavp2

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With a number of European governments warning users against the use of Microsoft's Internet Explorer, you might be on the lookout for an alternative.

Trouble is, there aren't many third-party browsers - aside from perhaps Firefox - that offer thorough Windows 7 integration, and if you've become accustomed to features such as Jump Lists and Aero Peek, you might still be clinging to IE8.

However, if you do want to try something new, you might want to try your luck with the latest pre-alpha release of Opera 10.5. Build 3199, codenamed Evenes, which offers a number of improvements and promises to be "less buggy".

Describing the release in a blog post, Opera's Ruari Ødegaard said "we have upgraded our core rending engine slightly, done a little work on video support, improved certain aspects of performance, improved Windows 7 integration, fixed some mail issues and added support for IMAP COMPRESS, added 'inspect element' to the right click menu and finally of course, fixed a number of common crashes!"

Despite being a pre-alpha release that Opera admits is a "work in progress" that "can still crash", the browser's Windows 7 integration is surprisingly competent, with Jump Lists - complete with shortcuts to Opera's Speed Dial - and Aero Peek all working smoothly. Continuing the Microsoft-like design, the browsers main file menu now exists in the form of a single Office 2007-like button in the top left-hand corner that reveals access to all of the underlying menus.

Opera states that it is "shifting up a gear" to get a stable release of 10.5 out in the open, but for those who're interested in seeing what's in store, the pre-alpha release could be worth a try. A Windows build is available from Opera.com and support for other platforms should follow shortly.



HEXUS Forums :: 23 Comments

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Been out for a while and i've been actively trying it - very good imho and not bad for such an early stage.
I was sure there had been a thread about this before, but I must have been wrong.

Ruari Ødegaard might be saying there is a slight upgrade to the rendering engine, but the JavaScript engine has have a massive overhaul. It is said to be one of the fastest scripting engines out there now.

http://labs.opera.com/news/2009/12/22/

http://my.opera.com/desktopteam/blog/2009/12/22/from-all-of-us-to-all-of-you

Makes for some very interesting reading.
The browser is very quick in general - it ‘feels’ much quicker than FF for me and this is especially true on lower powered systems. I'm not a big fan of synthetic benchmarks myself when it comes to browsers but i've spent a few months on FF now and switching back to opera is quite dramatic speed wise for me..

It's a shame it's largely ignored because it's a quality product really.
I've never used FF on any of my own systems, I used IE for long enough but was then persuaded to move to Opera a couple of years ago and have never looked back (still have to use IE for Outlook Web Access which winds me up). I've been forced to use FF on some other peoples systems and I just don't like it. It seems cluttered and clunky, and certainly a lot slower to start up.
dangel
The browser is very quick in general - it ‘feels’ much quicker than FF for me and this is especially true on lower powered systems. I'm not a big fan of synthetic benchmarks myself when it comes to browsers but i've spent a few months on FF now and switching back to opera is quite dramatic speed wise for me..

It's a shame it's largely ignored because it's a quality product really.
Have you ever tried Chrome? That is amazingly fast (well imo).