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Opera Neon Turns Your Web Browser Into a Mini Desktop (engadget.com)

Opera today announced it's launching a new browser called Opera Neon. From a report on Engadget:It's a separate "concept" browser that shows where software could go. It's much more visual, with an uncluttered look, tabs and shortcuts as bubbles and a side control bar that largely gets out of your way. However, the real fun starts when you want to juggle multiple sites -- this is more of an intelligent desktop than your usual web client. If you want to have two pages running side by side, it's relatively easy: you drag one of your open tabs to the top of the window, creating a split view much like what you see in Windows or the multi-window modes on mobile devices. Also, Neon acknowledges that your browser can frequently double as a media player. You can listen to tunes in the background, or pop out a video in order to switch websites while you watch. These aren't completely novel concepts all by themselves, but it's rare to see all of them in a browser at the same time.

12 of 78 comments (clear)

  1. kde by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    konqueror Has been doing this for how many years?

    1. Re:kde by arth1 · · Score: 2

      I believe it started with SGI's IRIX desktop back in the 90s.
      You could type a URL into any file manager window, and the web page would be rendered in the window, and any elements on it optionally accessible as files in a second pane for easy drag/drop/open. You could play music from a web page in one window, watch an mp2 video in another, working with your files in a third, and read slashdot in a fourth.

      This is the same principle, just calling it a browser instead of file manager.

  2. Opera = China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Do not want.

  3. Flat, unintuitive UI? No thanks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article starts with a screenshot, followed by:

    As much as modern desktop web browsers can do, their basic concept is stuck in a rut.

    Well the screenshot shows that this browser appears to be stuck in the same rut that has plagued browsers, and UI design in general, for a few years now: these goddamn flat, unintuitive UIs forced on the world by Chrome, Firefox, iOS, Android and Windows 8/10.

    With these awful flat UIs, it becomes much more difficult to determine how to interact with them. It's unclear what's a button, and what's a label, and what's an icon, and what happens if you click/press in a given area of the screen. That was the whole point of using borders and effects to try to give a three-dimensional appearance to UI elements: it makes it more obvious what they do and how they should be used.

    I have no interest in these browsers that keep screwing around with inefficient UI paradigms thought up by web designers, rather than real UI experts. We should really return to UI design techniques that made for usable UIs, instead of the shitty techniques used today that only lead to painful UI experiences.

    1. Re:Flat, unintuitive UI? No thanks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      THANK YOU. Unfortunately, I bet the UIs ARE thought up by experts. This seems to me like a classic disconnect between pie in the sky designers and everyday users. They do look good. I totally admit that. They are also completely unfunctional. It reminds me of house that are pretty, but you can't touch anything. It's nice to look good, but now we have to live somewhere.

  4. Re:A desktop ... by Zocalo · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is just the first step. Eventually, we'll have systemd-browser and the OS will be redundant.

    --
    UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
  5. Re: Will Servo support this, too? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Dunno, rusted servos are usually a death trap

  6. Re:Dear reserected Opera team, by Merk42 · · Score: 2

    It uses the same rendering engine as Opera and Chrome, Blink.

  7. Re:What for? by minstrelmike · · Score: 2

    We need a new web browser because people have finally figured out that apps are too tricky to deal with. Apple is pita and android is 14,000 different versions. They need a phone-sized broswer that looks and sort of acts like an app.

  8. this GUI it's so bad by qQ7eBMsfM5gs · · Score: 2

    I even threw up a little in my mouth.
    OPs please give a warning about modern UI posts, think of your readers who just ate!

  9. Re:A desktop ... by cerberusss · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is just the first step. Eventually, we'll have systemd-browser and the OS will be redundant.

    Don't be silly. You'll always need something between the hardware and the rest. And that's where Emacs comes in.

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    8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
  10. But why? by hackel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What advantage is there to having a browser manage its own windows instead of the desktop window manager? It's not like this is new—almost every Windows program used to have a multiple-document interface that let you arrange multiple document windows inside of a primary application window. We moved away from this UI for a reason. It makes no sense. It's duplicating the functionality of the primary GUI and window manager. You can easily achieve the same result using existing tiling window managers and other tools. Is there some actual advantage here that I'm missing?