totally agree. the opera interface is the least intuitive of all the browsers i've tested. on my freebsd box its also the fastest to open and navigate, but the bookmarks bar default setting of auto-hideing, is totally annoying. i think unless a team has an innovative reason for creating a new interface [i.e some new feature that demands it] they shouldnt really change how a user expects to interact with the information.
i think the biggest problem for opera is organizing the features in a more intuitive manner so new users can access them and customize them, and also keeping the features from taking up all the space. opera definantly feels cluttered at times
when i still used winblows i liked fprot..simple..not a major commitment..easy to remove..and actually works to remove viruses.
*not just for windows btw
totally agree. the opera interface is the least intuitive of all the browsers i've tested. on my freebsd box its also the fastest to open and navigate, but the bookmarks bar default setting of auto-hideing, is totally annoying. i think unless a team has an innovative reason for creating a new interface [i.e some new feature that demands it] they shouldnt really change how a user expects to interact with the information.
i think the biggest problem for opera is organizing the features in a more intuitive manner so new users can access them and customize them, and also keeping the features from taking up all the space. opera definantly feels cluttered at times
when i still used winblows i liked fprot..simple..not a major commitment..easy to remove..and actually works to remove viruses. *not just for windows btw