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Opera Sees "Dramatic" Rise From Microsoft's Ballot

TheReal_sabret00the notes a TechRadar piece reporting that Opera Software has seen a doubling from normal download numbers on average since Microsoft's browser-choice screen lit up in Europe. The UK saw an 85% increase and for other countries it was larger still: Poland 328%, Spain 215%, and Italy 202%. Hakon Wium Lie, CTO of Opera Software, said "A multitude of browsers will make the web more standardised and easier to browse."

6 of 378 comments (clear)

  1. an anti-swpat company doing well by H4x0r+Jim+Duggan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Opera Software did great work lobbying against software patents in the campaigns on the EU software patents directive. Thanks Opera!.

  2. Re:Correlation/causation by lyinhart · · Score: 4, Informative

    This article explicitly states that the additional downloads are coming from the screen: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8574883.stm

    --
    Freedom is drinking a beer in the park when you're supposed to be at work.
  3. Opera Mini by rwa2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    As long as we're spreading the Opera love...
    I've tried but never really have gotten into Opera on the desktop. However on mobile devices -- dumbphones and smartphones and PDAs -- it's pretty much the only game in town.
    http://m.opera.com/

    The interface is quite fast, even on my crappy old Samsung. Difficult to believe it's a Java midp, given the responsiveness with which you can scroll around the page, zoom in/out, and slide back. It's much better than the built-in browsers that I've used on Samsung, Blackberry, older Palm devices, etc. and I even use it sometimes on my wife's Android phone. And it has some sort of bookmark sync thing tied to your account.

    Anyway, if it wasn't for opera mini, I wouldn't have been able to get by with my dumb phone on a cheap wap plan for so long. Also with my Blackberry and Palm it allowed me to hit some javascript-heavy pages when I didn't have access to a computer (airline check-ins, etc.) and the built-in browsers just wouldn't hack it. So it's an essential piece to have on your mobile device.

    Downsides:
    * sometimes I lose my bookmarks, I think when I exit out of it too fast and my device kills java before it's finished cleaning up.
    * My phone puts java apps in a really annoying place without a quick shortcut to it (Tools | My Files | Games).
    * It disables my phone's standby for some reason.
    * Opera Mini 5 beta doesn't work, but Opera Mini 4 works great. YMMV
    * java nags to grant the app network access every time I launch a new session.

    But it's awesome enough that I put up with those inconveniences to use it :P

  4. Re:Correlation/causation by mdwh2 · · Score: 5, Informative

    was also appalled that it wasn't free; they wanted me to pay for it!

    Note that Opera has been completely free for years (since 2005). (And even before that, long before Firefox existed, you had the option of paying or a small ad.) I'm not sure why the idea of commercial sortware is "appalling" - I mean, you're running this on Windows!

    I'd certainly recommend trying it again - Opera has been continually improved, and it's not really fair to judge it today based on a five year old version. (Also it's unclear whether the webpage problems were due to bugs/limitations in Opera, or because of poorly written webpages that are only written for IE and Firefox.)

  5. Re:That's very nice Opera by mcvos · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've been using Opera for ages. For a long time, it was really the only choice for power users. Every other browser would crash or slow to a crawl when you had more than a few dozen pages open. Back in my Pentium II 200MHz days, I needed 200 pages open to inconvenience Opera. It's still one of the browsers with the smallest memory footprint, although it's not leading by as much as it used to.

  6. Re:Nintendo? by david_thornley · · Score: 4, Informative

    Except that Nintendo isn't a monopoly. They share the console market with Microsoft and Sony, and the handheld market with Sony.

    There are a lot of things you can do if you're not a monopoly that you can't if you are.

    Nor do I want anybody telling me Microsoft Windows isn't a monopoly. There's legal and practical definitions for these things, and they don't require there to be absolutely no competition.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes