CNET Editors' review
The bottom line: Extensions, highly competitive page-load times, cutting edge features, and strong support for "future Web" technologies make Opera 11 one of the best browsers available.
Review:
The second-oldest browser currently in use, Opera debuted way back in 1995 and has recently undergone a major overhaul. No longer the quirky choice of enthusiasts, Opera has developed into a robust, full-featured suite of browsing tools.
Opera covers the basics with tabbed browsing, mouse-over previews, a customizable search bar, advanced bookmarking tools, and simple integration with e-mail and chat clients. Mouse-gesture support, keyboard shortcuts, and drag-and-drop functionality round out the essentials.
What's new in Opera 11?
Installation
Installing Opera is a fast and short process, taking less than two minutes. Many of Opera's built-in features require creating a MyOpera account, but the browser will only prompt you to do so when you use them for the first time--it's not required to browse.
Tap the "Options" button on the first install screen to reveal configuration tweaks. Besides changing the browser's default language and install path, you can also install for just the currently-signed on user, or choose to install Opera directly to an external device. It's a great, simple way to create a portable version of Opera for a USB key.
Interface
Opera's interface keeps the same look that debuted in Opera 10.50, with a condensed menu button in the upper left corner, tabs on top, and a translucent status bar on the bottom that hosts buttons to reveal Opera's Panels, and to activate Link, Unite, and Turbo. The bottom right corner of the status bar sports a dedicated zoom button.
Buttons on the navigation bar have been condensed, and are now the same height as the location bar. This gives the interface a polished look, and minimizes the amount of space that the bar takes up. The search box, located in its default space to the right of the location bar, can be removed. That and further interface customizations can be made by right-clicking on the navigation bar and selecting customize.
Extension buttons appear to the right of the search box, as they do in Google Chrome, while a recycle bin for quickly re-opening recently closed tabs lives on the right side of the tab bar.
The influence of the radical interface changes that Google Chrome introduced in 2008 can be seen here, from the tabs on top to the extension icons, yet Opera's personality does still come through enough to have a different vibe and feel from Chrome.
Features and support
The five major browsers have been liberally borrowing features and innovations from each other for years, yet Opera has developed a reputation for showcasing some of the more interesting browser developments first.
Opera 11 introduces tab stacks, a tab grouping mechanism similar in concept to Firefox 4's Panorama, but completely based in the tab bar. To use it, drag one tab on top of another. The bottom tab will disappear, and an arrow will appear to the right of the tab. Click it to reveal the stack, and drag a tab off the stack to separate it. Where Panorama's global viewpoint makes it easy to see all your tab groups, Opera's tab stacking feels much smoother and more intuitive.
Tab stacks are a tab-grouping mechanism similar in concept to Firefox's Panorama, but completely based in the tab bar. To use it, drag one tab on top of another. The bottom tab will disappear, and an arrow will appear to the right of the tab. Click it and the tabs in the stack will slide out to one side. To break up a stack, drag a tab off the stack. Mouse over the stack to see previews for all the tabs in the stack.
(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)As noted earlier, extensions have finally come to Opera in version 11. Opera uses a lightweight extension framework based in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to minimize the processor hit that add-ons can incur. If you're familiar with the extension networks in the WebKit-based Chrome and Safari, you'll be very comfortable with how Opera handles its add-ons. It's interesting to note that Opera sees extensions as singing in harmony with their existing Widgets framework, saying that widgets are basically stand-alone Web-based applications, while extensions are for changing the user experience in-browser.
A third big change is the introduction of on-demand plug-ins. This is a feature that has been on the periphery of user awareness for a while, but it's about to go big as it provides much more control to users over page security and page load times. It's great for people who are rightly worried about unpatched Flash and QuickTime security exploits, or just want sites to load faster. Go to Preferences, Advanced, then Content to toggle it.
Another change comes to the security badge system, which marks sites as "verified safe". Click on the gray "Web" globe icon to the left of the URL bar to check a site's status. Getting information returned was quick on most sites, although it was a bit slow for others. The badges are colored yellow for "secure", green for "trusted", and blue for when you're running Opera's Turbo mode, another excellent feature that's designed for assisting people surfing on slower connections. The Turbo badge will also display estimated data savings. You can turn on Turbo using the button in the status bar at the bottom left of the browser.
Opera's site badges also include a useful reporting mechanism, so it's easy to report a site as fraudulent or malicious.
With plug-ins disabled, click the "play" triangle and the plug-in content--in this case, Flash video--will start playing.
(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)There have been some smaller tweaks to the browser, too. Pinning a tab will now jump it to the left of the tab bar, as is done in other browsers. The personal bar has been replaced, too, by a bookmarks bar, both pulling the browser into parity with the competition and making bookmarks accessible with one click.
Opera's extras push it to among the top of the class. Opera's desktop widgets can appear anywhere, and Opera Unite and its deep feature set for file sharing and streaming is now available to Mac users. Quick Find has improved the search tool, allowing for full text searching from the address field, the history panel, and opera:historysearch. We're also fans of the inline spell checker that supports 51 languages, and the recent addition of the auto-updater. Unlike Chrome's automatic updates, Opera plays nice with its users and gives you several choices as to how to implement auto-updating, including disabling it.
There's Growl and multitouch trackpad support on Macs, support for some HTML5 including next-generation video and audio codec WebM, geolocation compatibility, Web Workers, App Cache, and Web fonts. The Web Open Font Format (WOFF), which Opera co-sponsored, hasn't yet been added, although Opera expects it will be soon. Meanwhile, Opera Link enables Bookmarks, the Personal bar, Speed Dial, and Notes synchronization across all other Opera instances, including the iPhone's Opera Mini. Opera's availability on multiple mobile and desktop platforms makes it uniquely appealing as a one-stop browser shop.
One of Opera's lesser-known features is its integrated mail client. It's a reasonable alternative to Outlook, offering many similar features. It can handle importing mailbox files from Outlook Express, Thunderbird, Netscape, and Eudora, supports POP3 and IMAP, and quickly synced with Gmail when we added our account.
There are other features in Opera, including tab previews, newsgroups support, a built-in session manager, and a fantastic array of customizations that rivals Firefox. Of all the browsers out there, Opera ships with a massive feature set and is an excellent choice for users who want something fast and robust right out of the box.
Performance
Opera some big performance improvements in this version, and they appear to bear out. In addition to helping some pages load up to 30 percent faster simple by toggling the plug-ins, as described in the features section above, the browser's performance in general has been improved. Opera says that Opera 11 is 15 to 20 percent faster than Opera 10.63, and that the browser size on disk has been reduced by almost one-third.
Full benchmarks will be added here as they are completed, but preliminary results indicate that Opera 11's page-load times remain comparable to Google Chrome's on publicly-available benchmark tests like Google's V8, WebKit's SunSpider 0.9.1, Mozilla's Kraken, and Futuremark's Peacekeeper.
Conclusion
Opera is in firm grip of the 5th-place slot in the race to be the world's most-used browser. It doesn't have the backing of a major corporation like Apple's Safari, Google's Chrome, or Microsoft's Internet Explorer, and it lacks the massive developer's community of Mozilla's Firefox. What it does have, and these are recent developments to be sure, are a fantastic combination of speed and built-in services.
Opera undoubtedly has what it takes to unseat even the biggest-name browsers. You just need to hear it sing.
Watch the CNET video review of Opera:Publisher's Description
From Opera Software:
Opera 11.01 is the fastest web browser available, and offers more features than any other browser to let you take advantage of today's Web. New in Opera 11.01: -Tab stacking lets you keep many pages organized. -Google search predictions appear when searching the Web from your address field. -Extensions from our extensions catalog let you add new functionality. -Visual mouse gestures help you perform common browser actions more quickly. Popular features: -Opera Turbo speeds up browsing on slow connections. -Opera Link can synchronize bookmarks with other computers and mobile phones. -Opera Unite makes it easy to share files, photos and music from your computer.
What's new in this version: Opera 11.01 is a recommended upgrade offering security and stability enhancements, and reverts some changes made to mouse gestures.
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All versions:
4.3 starsout of 3,613 votes
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Current version:
4.0 starsout of 55 votes
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My rating:
Write review
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"The only browser I use practically."
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
I like the new speed enhancing features such as enabling web plugins on demand, plus it's finally open to plug-ins, not just widgets. Makes browsing efficient.
Cons
Wish it included a more customizable pop-up blocker, and ad blocker as well as deeper FTP features.
Summary
One of the best browsers around. I had no stability issues with it, however, it's not perfect as there is a few features I wish it had. I only use IE for web sites like Netflix, but I use mainly Opera as it is much more efficient browser to use.
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"Fast and furious"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Great browser the speed dial makes it one great browser.
Cons
Seems to crash for me a lot.
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"SMOOTH BROWSER!!!!!!!!!"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Great tabbed browsing.............
Fast...........Cons
none............
Summary
Must use it......
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"fast browser"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Speed is one of its most important shining points.
Cons
what a pity that some not support Opera
Summary
It's trustworthy. It may become more compatible.
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"Fast and speedy; lacks website support"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Fast and swift, loads pages easily
Cons
Youtube videos freezes, Ad Block does not block most ads, slow when opening multiple tabs
Summary
I tried out Opera when version 9 came out; back when I had Vista. The only problem was that this browser was not compatible with some sites. Rendering me to be lured away from Opera until version 11 came out. Also, there was this digital certificate error on about 40% of the sites I stumble upon (no problem when testing it on Firefox 4 however). Watching Youtube videos is another problem. When you over over the time of the video and see its buffer rate, it seems to refuse to reveal itself. However, I think I am just using this as an alternative in case of Firefox slows down or has problems. It's my #4 browsers in terms of compatibility, extensions, and speed.
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"What Happened!"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Fast and smooth. Well up to Opera's usual high standard. I like that.
Cons
Has difficulty flushing out its own cache. Kept crashing on me every 10 minutes.
Summary
If they fixed the problem with cache cleaning, then I'd happily give it a higher rating.
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"This browser is simply Awesome!"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
One of the fastest browsers i've used.
Cons
Some sites behave badly
Summary
Top notch browser.
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"Sweet Little Browser"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Very user-friendly, light, nimble and quick - has some unique features as well
Cons
Not compatible with Google Desktop and had trouble loading some pages.
Summary
There's a lot to like about Opera and I would keep it except that I'm addicted to my Google Desktop. It's easily the most fully featured browser out of the box this side of IE , very little set-up required, with excellent help-guides. I found it to be as fast, if not faster than Chrome (my default browser), yet very light on system resources. I REALLY liked the turbo-boost feature and the mouse-support - I wish all the major web browser developers would implement these 2 features - they are well worth stealing, guys. The fact that Google is Stillllll not providing support is really to their discredit ( and Opera's if the problems are on their end) as this is a first-rate browser that is fun to use and light enough to use on smaller devices. Add to that some rockin' features, an incredible number of skins and add-ons , and a vibe that really is all it's own, and you have one fine singer that can take on any of the competition - check out Opera for yourself, and listen to her sing - I think you'll be impressed.
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"Nice browser"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Fast. Nice look and lots of extras included.
Cons
It doesn't have it's own "can't do without" factor like Firefox and Chrome do. It needs something to put it over.
Summary
You wouldn't go wrong using Opera but the problem for Opera is you wouldn't go wrong using FIrefox 4, Chrome, or IE9 either.
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"Overall a positive experience - so far"
Version: Opera 11.01
Pros
Fast, visually pleasing, nice features
Cons
I still have a problem getting it to work inside a corporate network - support questions never answered (3rd party provider). Some webpages not yet compatible with Opera 11.01 (GoDaddy webmail, for instance)
Summary
Highly recommended, as good or better than IE8, Firefox 4.0 and Chrome. Haven't tried IE9 yet
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