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Opera 7 for Mac OS X Preview Released

apetime writes "A preview of Opera 7 for Mac OS X has finally been released. The new version brings Mac Opera up to date with the latest Windows and Linux releases, including the Presto rendering engine, Opera Mail client, Opera Chat client for IRC, and integration with Mac OS X's Keychain and Address Book. After fears of cancellation when Safari came out, this is great news for recent switchers and Opera fans, and another great browser choice for Mac users."

3 of 71 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why? by rekkanoryo · · Score: 4, Informative
    Safari is based on Konqueror's rendering engine. While a great engine at heart, it's not as good on some sites as other rendering engines, such as Mozilla's, IE's, and Opera's, are. Granted this has some to do with the design of the site, but design isn't everything. The browser has to help make it look good, too.

    Take, for example, Slashdot itself. Try viewing it in several different browsers. Everyone I know find that Opeara and IE tie for first place in making the site look good, with Mozilla/Netscape 6+ as a close second, but Konqueror as a distant third.

    Opera, besides its excellent rendering engine, also has the tabbed interface working in its favor. Sure Mozilla has this too, but Opera lets you reopen the browser after a crash or application close and have all the pages that were open at the time of the crash or close. This is a lifesaver at times, for example when your cpu cooler dies and the system overheats, causing it to halt. When you repair the system and return it to operation, you can reopen Opera and have all the pages you were looking at before brought back without having to manually reopen them or hunt for them.

    I'll take Opera and Mozilla over the others any day.

  2. Why Opera: by Illissius · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those wanting an *exhaustive* (and yet likely incomplete) description of what it has to offer, look here.

    Oh, and the trolls whining about bloat should get a clue. It's only 3-4MB, browser, mail, and everything else included. It's one of the least bloated apps I've ever seen (possible exception of windows/total commander). When your browser alone is twice that (firebird/fox/?), I don't see what grounds you have to complain.

    And while I'm at it, although Opera *is* ad-or-payware, might I mention that it does its advertising in the best way possible: a context sensitive Google text ad in the toolbar. Not annoying at *all*, and it can even be useful occasionally.

    And I could go on, and on, and on. But I'll just mention that the default configuration (both UI and otherwise) is halfway braindead (popup blocking *off* by default, when it's one of the main selling points? wtf?), so just make sure to customize it (which is rather simple, and takes only a few minutes).

    And since this is a Mac forum, some good OSX-esque skins are Safrad (which I use myself, not because I want to emulate a mac, but because it actually looks good), Sofa King, and Lars Kleinschmidt's various OSX and iMac skins. They're available here. (Oh, and by the way, this is a preview release, and there is supposedly a new default skin in the works, just so you know.)

    --
    Work is punishment for failing to procrastinate effectively.
  3. Re:Why? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 4, Informative

    You don't have to buy Opera. I haven't. I like the ads, and I click on them now and then. They've managed to get contextual text ads, and google searches into the ad bar, so it's actually kind of handy sometimes. They're even less obtrusive than in windows.

    2 things:

    1) You misunderstand what I mean by 'inline find'. I don't want a popup panel so that I can type what I'm looking for, I want the search to find items AS I type. If I'm looking for the word 'encyclopedia' on a page, in Opera, I use the inline find, and it's found the word by the time I've typed as far as 'enc'. With Safari, and most other search dialogues, I have to type the whole word, or hope that when I type 'enc' in the panel, I find what I'm looking for right away. Actually, I'm probably terming this incorrectly. Opera's find isn't just 'inline' it's also incremental.

    2) 'Reload page every n minutes'. For news and weather sites, I love this feature. I just set /. to reload every 15 minutes, and every time I check, there's new news. It's a minor feature, but I appreciate it. It's even better now that it works on a tab-by-tab basis. I have several tabs that automatically load themselves at different times. (In the early implementation, everything had to reload at the same time, or you could only reload one tab...it's actually useful now.)

    Like I said, I love and appreciate Safari for what it is, a small fast browser. It's light on the bloat, but does a lot, which I can respect. I've gotten to Opera and all the little conveniences that it provides, so I'm going to stick with it, even though I realize that in comparison it's an overly complex monstrosity.