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Opera Shows Off Its Smart New Redesign That's Just Like All the Other Browsers (arstechnica.com)

Opera has unveiled a major redesign for its browser that's expected to ship in version 59. As Peter Bright writes via Ars Technica, "the new appearance adopts the same square edges and clean lines that we've seen in other browsers, giving the browser a passing similarity to both Firefox and Edge." From the report: The principles of the new design? "We put Web content at center stage," the Opera team writes on its blog. The design is pared down so that you can browse "unhindered by unnecessary distractions." Borders and dividing lines have been removed, flattening out parts of the browser's interface and making them look more uniform and less eye-catching. The new design comes with the requisite dark and light modes, a welcome trend that we're glad to see is being widely adopted.

Being Web-centric is not a bad principle for an application such as a browser, where the bulk of the functionality and interest comes from the pages we're viewing rather than the browser itself. At first blush, I think that Opera has come up with something that looks good, but it does feel like an awfully familiar design rationale. [...] Opera plans to ship the R3 release in March, and a developer preview can be downloaded today to give the new appearance a spin. The new design isn't the only notable feature of R3; it also integrates a crypto wallet for Ethereum transactions. In conjunction with Opera on your phone, this feature can be used to securely make online payments to sites using Coinbase Commerce for their payment processing.

8 of 54 comments (clear)

  1. Lemmings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The design is pared down so that you can browse "unhindered by unnecessary distractions."

    Thank god, I love not being able to see the edges of tabs, etc.

    Why is the UI/UX world so full of fucking lemmings?

    1. Re:Lemmings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, that whole minimalist philosophy is getting old. There's a reason why things are where they are. It is so you can use them. They're not in the way, they're were they should be, that handful of pixel space you save isn't worth the irritation of having to jump through hoops for what should be a single click.

      If I wanted minimalism, I'd junk my mouse & keyboard and browse the web with a series of hidden foot pedals.

    2. Re: Lemmings by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Windows 2.0 from some 30 years ago...

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  2. Browser monoculture by xack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not only are we using the same engines, we are sharing the same user interfaces. The web is worse off for it. We need diversity in browser engines and interfaces, but developers are too addicted to conformity.

    1. Re:Browser monoculture by PsychoSlashDot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not only are we using the same engines, we are sharing the same user interfaces.

      What interface? The modern UI design ethic is "hide the user interface" coupled with "never use words when you can use icons that don't convey what they do unless the user already knows." Saves effort on regional translation, I suppose.

      --
      "Oh no... he found the .sig setting."
    2. Re:Browser monoculture by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't see a huge problem in mostly using the same engine if it's open source and being actively developed well. To some extent, you know... the point is to render HTML consistently. I understand the benefit of avoiding a monoculture, but it's better than web developers having to include a bunch of hacks in their sites to get their sites to render properly on each browser. Yeah, it'd be nice if there were different implementations with different approaches to keep things diverse, but if I were a developer I wouldn't want to spend my time reinventing the wheel when there's a perfectly good open-source wheel available.

      And I think part of the reason browsers are a bit stagnant and boring is, we just need to to render HTML. There's really not much room at the moment for interesting innovation. Just render the HTML securely, protect privacy, and block ads and annoyances. Frankly, they should probably be stripping things out. Static web pages shouldn't need to use as much resources as they do.

  3. Emphasis on content: good. Flat design: bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course it's a good thing for the browser to just get out of the way and show the web content. Much like an OS should just get out of the way and facilitate the apps.

    Oh wait, what fantasy world am I living in?

    In any case, "minimalistic" and "flat design" are not at all the same thing. Good UI design is discoverable and instinctive. Clickable items actually look clickable, not like miscellaneous text strewn around the screen. Functions and settings are easy and obvious to find. Fonts are large enough, colors contrast enough, that you don't have to think twice. Study after study has shown that flat design kills productivity. Whichever hipster (Ives?) decided that cool trumps functional was an idiot, and we're all still suffering.

  4. Re:It shits me to tears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every modern graphical sign is meaningless. Hover tips are essential. So why not dispense with the meaningless graphics and just use the words?

    Does three lines stacked on top of each other have some meaning beyond "this is what UI people put on pages these days instead of a menu"?

    Does a star/gear/sprocket thing have any meaning beyond "this is what UI people put on pages these days instead of a menu"?

    Can you tell ahead of time what the "+" button of any page will do? Could be anything. Why not use some words and tell us? Pressing "+" and having it do something I don't want is annoying as f... but that's how everyone expects everything to be used these days: experiment until it breaks and tough shit what broke while doing that.

    And the extra bit of spicy sizzle: I'm probably not using your UI on a phone. I don't have to have it squeezed into a tiny box. I have space and I want to use it.