Opera goes Chrome

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cowboy
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Opera goes Chrome

#1 Post by cowboy »

Also posted under the browsers section, but noticed that Opera has given up their independent browser engine efforts, and will base all future releases on Webkit, and it seems, Chromium. No indication what will become of their email client.

The WebKit engine is already very good, and we aim to take part in making it even better. It supports the standards we care about, and it has the performance we need. It makes more sense to have our experts working with the open source communities to further improve WebKit and Chromium, rather than developing our own rendering engine further. Opera will contribute to the WebKit and Chromium projects, and we have already submitted our first set of patches: to improve multi-column layout.

http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-575691 ... ransplant/
[i]"you fix what you can fix and you let the rest go.."[/i] - Cormac McCarthy - No Country For Old Men.

ChiJoan
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Joined: Fri 27 May 2005, 08:41

Actually they're using Chromium

#2 Post by ChiJoan »

Saw it on Infoworld that the Opera Beta was out. Is anyone testing it? They took out their mail part to be separate, but they didn't mention their Torrent tracker, or other items yet.

Joan in Reno

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Semme
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#3 Post by Semme »

Joan- provided you run the 'right' OS, you can <wink> try it yourself. I merely rename ~/.opera when sampling..

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Iguleder
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#4 Post by Iguleder »

It's very different - feels like a skinned Chromium. Under a Pentium 4 machine, it feels a 'lil bit lighter than Chrome (which is extremely sluggish), while the good ol' Opera is the only modern browser that performs well on this machine.

I have no idea why they chose this direction for this product, since it's going to be very hard for them to beat Chrome using ... Chromium (let's not forget, it's Chrome minus some features). As far as I know, Google open sources most of Chrome's source code (as Chromium) only when a stable version is released. In other words, if Chrome 28 is being worked on and Opera doesn't have access to its rendering engine until the release, it will always be at least one version behind. Correct me if I'm wrong.

I think the right thing to do (for the company) is to give up on the desktop variant of this browser - I think it doesn't have a chance against competition.
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