Opera Releases Stable FreeBSD Browser 116
1nsane0ne writes "The Register is reporting that Opera has released a production FreeBSD version. It appears to have fixed some of the problems that I found in a few hours of playing around with the betas and will be interesting to test a bit more."
My Obligation (Score:3, Funny)
isn't BSD dead?
Re:My Obligation (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My Obligation (Score:2)
Re:My Obligation (Score:4, Informative)
It may not be perfered by many, but it's still heavy in development, and prefered by many ISPs.
Re:My Obligation (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:My Obligation (Score:4, Informative)
The biggest problem I had with FreeBSD was ports didnt compile, but 4.7 most ports I tried compiled out of the box. Only grip I have is, its still using gcc 2.95, while 3.2 is out. But I hear 5.0 is completely GCC3.3 based.
Re:My Obligation (Score:4, Informative)
Regards,
-Jeremy
Re:My Obligation (Score:2)
When the base system is gcc3.x based, it should have show an improved speed. On my gentoo linux desktop with AMD optimizations compiled in, you notice the speed increase.
I'll prob snag a copy of 5.0 development later and play with it, I already have to grab the cvs version of Xfree for ATI Radeon 9700 support.
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
Why ? I have many servers with linux and I've always wanted to test FreeBSD. But I don't see any reason.
I've seen posts about the ports software admin better than rpm. But the true is RPM rocks for servers. It keeps you up to date and never broke for me.
I don't want to start a Linux vs FreeBSD thread. I'm willing to try. Just give me a reason.
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
I prefer Debian stable for the servers I run at work ( I work at an ISP). Makes for easy admin'ing and more time to slack off
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
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Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
Re:My Obligation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My Obligation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
Re:My Obligation (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
Re:My Obligation (Score:1)
Good to hear (Score:5, Informative)
Very good to hear. I love my FreeBSD desktop dearly, and one of the last ties I had to enabling Linux compatibility was a release version of Opera. So far I have yet to find a better combination of
Re:Good to hear (Score:1)
Re:Good to hear (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Good to hear (Score:1)
My sister is no computer geek, so Phoenix is clearly heading in the right direction.
Re:Good to hear (Score:1)
anti-bloat at it's greatest.
Re:Good to hear (Score:1)
Re:Good to hear (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Good to hear (Score:1)
Re:Good to hear (Score:1)
The real news (Score:5, Informative)
-schussat
Re:The real news (Score:1)
I guess its why it is a real improvement. Most of cut/paste stuff problems (I heard, win32 users here) are gone.
Re:The real news (Score:1)
What I think Opera are trying to do here is to sell a browser to the niche (but fast growing market) of *nix desktop users - which most other software companies do completely ignore.
Much thanks to Opera for thier continued support of these platforms and for producing a great, damn fast and stable browser... The speed of Opera getting a version out for new versions of distro's is a definate sign (IMHO) of their comittment to both these platforms and users.
Re:The real news (Score:1)
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Re:The real news (Score:1)
Nice (Score:3, Insightful)
Opera is a lot faster than Mozilla, and I think it is a prime browser. I've been using it off and on for almost 2 years (I knew a guy who was from Norway, and was huge on this browser even back then).
This is awesome. Way to go Opera. Congrats FreeBSD.
Re:Nice (Score:2)
You completely lost me there. If 'Opera is trying to become the netscape of Unix-land', then that makes Netscape what???
Perhaps you meant Opera is trying to take Netscape's spot by porting to all the Unix platforms?
Perhaps you meant Opera is tring to be the Internet Explorer for Unix?
Perhaps you meant Opera is trying to make their browser as unstable and feature-bare as Netscape 4 an Unix?
I just don't follow.
Re:Nice (Score:2)
The instability of Netscape is just truely astounding. I still remember getting lots of "bus errors" when trying to run Netscape under Red Hat 5.0 and thinking that I was doing something wrong. ; )
Netscape 7 under Wintel seems a lot better, but I can't help but wonder why they would bother any more. I'm running it out of morbid curiosity, just wanting to see if they've upgraded the speed and stability from the Netscape 6 (molasses) release. Maybe they're trying to be a minority of minorities. I can't see any niche left that they could fit into, even if they could fix all the old problems.
Choose an arch and choose an OS and you can always be sure that Netscape will crash on it, right when you actually are about to do something at a stage that you think you should be cut-and-pasting, just in case.
Re:Nice (Score:2)
Yes Netscape 6 was stripped of the best Mozilla features.
Still, the performance & stability in the latest versions of Mozilla is quite impressive.
As for niches, Netscape lost out because it was slow and unstable. Now that Moz has all the features known to mankind, it just might make a killing once again. The fact that it is open source (not under the GPL) means that anyone can use it, extend it, and modify it.
I would dare say that Netscape/Moz has a very good chance to take back the desktop, as this time it's Microsoft that has been sitting around while the competiton catches up.
Even if you don't believe that Moz has a chance against Internet Explorer, it's still the best Open Source browser, and I would argue that once the performance improves a litte more, it would be the best browser, anywhere, period.
Re:Nice (Score:2)
I quite like Moz and really hope that it continues to get better. My mind is certainly open. Netscape 7 and the new Mozilla's are looking good.
I would actually like to see Mozilla kick arse, especially against IE. I just learned to really hate Netscape and when 6 came out it was like the last straw.
I'm sure the open source community will keep making Moz great. It's just that when I think of Netscape, all I can think of is the slow buggy Netscape of times before open source was able to improve it.
It's a shame (Score:3, Interesting)
You don't want to pay for it? Fine. Use the advert version. Or don't use it at all.
I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:5, Interesting)
That said I'm surprised Opera would port for that small a user base, especially considering its a payware browser. I guess the same could have been said for Beos which never had a large user base.
Anyway good for Opera. Its too bad the other 99.999% of Desktop ISV's out there ignore any linux or nix, that isn't OSX. I keep waiting money in hand, but year after year they never come, Sigh.
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:3, Funny)
"..there must be 10 times less BSD desktop users.."
"Ten times less.."
Is that times a negative ten?
Or maybe "one-tenth"?
hmm.. a real puzzle.
t_t_b
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:2)
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:5, Insightful)
Your probably right, but you know what? I'm glad developers don't always pay attention to things like that, because if they did Windows would be the only OS with any support what-so-ever. I'd dare say 95% of all desktop machines run Windows, if not more. So by your logic, supporting Linux or Mac OSX is a waste of time.
I happen to personally really like FreeBSD.
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:2)
Me too, Like I said its cool that they did.
"So by your logic, supporting Linux or Mac OSX is a waste of time."
Exactly. That's why linux gets no desktop support and Mac gets significantly less than windows does.
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:2)
Fact is linux is still ignored by all the big dekstop developers. Sure we get the odd game once in a blue moon but overall commercial companies have passed on linux. That doesn't mean I don't think Redhat 8 with OpenOffice kicks ass, but it doesn't change the fact we are still being ignored.
I'm not the one who needs convincing.
Re:I'm amazed Opera did that (Score:3, Informative)
Opera's appearance (Score:2, Informative)
That being said, as each day passes it's going to be harder and harder to pry Mozilla from my cold dead hands, especially with such great add-on software [mozdev.org].
Re:Opera's appearance (Score:2)
They are trying to keep the binaries as small as possible, and that is tougher for them to do on Linux, due to the subtle differences between some of the distributions. At least, that is the impression that I got from the programmers.
Re:Opera's appearance (Score:1)
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Presto - Where'd It Go? (Score:1)
Re:Presto - Where'd It Go? (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, I don't expect Presto to arrive on Linux until December or January, at the earliest.
Browsers, Java, etc. (Score:2, Insightful)
Yahoo's reason for choosing PHP over Java/J2EE, is simply due to poor Java (especially threads) support in FreeBSD.
I am not using FreeBSD because Java support totally sucks compared to Linux, Mac OS X and Windows.
Re:Browsers, Java, etc. (Score:1, Interesting)
This Tells Me... (Score:2)
...that BSD is... no, no, it doesn't tell me that. It tells me that Opera must be very portable, since they wouldn't have invested too much effort on the *BSD desktop market. Really, I'm surprised that this required much effort at all since the BSDs run X and most of the major X-based desktops anyway. I mean, I can see how you'd have trouble porting from Windows to *NIX, but once you've ported to one *NIX, the rest shouldn't be that difficult unless you've shot yourself in the foot, which the Opera developers plainly haven't.
Stupid, really. (Score:1)
A real Review (Score:3, Informative)
I liked one think about the pre-release beta version... I didn't see any banner ads. It was likely accepting my Linux registration, despite not being the linux version.
The release (6.1) does not accept a Linux registration key, and you have to register all over again... Understandable, but still irritating.
That said, this is far better than the initial beta, or the Linux version under emulation. Just plain and simply, it is far more stable... I have yet to have it crash on me. Athough I've only been using it for a few hours, this is a very very good sign.
Additionally, I was previously unable to paste text from a webpage in Opera into AbiWord, and a couple other apps. That has now gone away, and the clipboard is working (mostly) as it should.
<RANT>
That's step one. Now all they have to do is *completely* redesign the interface and I'll be a happy Opera user. Since that's probably not in the cards, I'll continue to use Opera as little as possible.
</RANT>
why do this? (Score:1)
Why? Why? Why does the company do this?
I can never understand...
Re:why do this? (Score:3)
Opera, dead? (Score:1)
Re:Opera, dead? (Score:1)
Their deal with Macromedia [opera.no] should help, too.
NetBSD/mac68k version? (Score:1)
So when's Opera going to port to my platform? My SE/30 is just dying to run Opera on it's black and white 512x342 screen. I bet the ad banners won't even fit.
OK, I'm only kidding. Partially. *grin*
Re:Jesus christ - front page and nine replies so f (Score:5, Insightful)
Define dead. Percentage-wise, IE is the only browsezr that's alive.
Somehow they've found money to keep developing new versions of Opera, so I wouldn't be so quick to call it 'dead'.
Re:Jesus christ - front page and nine replies so f (Score:1)
Fran
Re:Jesus christ - front page and nine replies so f (Score:2)
Re:Jesus christ - front page and nine replies so f (Score:3, Funny)
Dad, You killed the zombie Flanders! He was a zombie?
Re:Jesus christ - front page and nine replies so f (Score:2, Funny)
Mmmmmmmmmarf, BRAINS!
Re:Jesus christ - front page and nine replies so f (Score:2)
I can see, not just by your 5 digit user id or your accurate depiction of the average
I stand ready, poised for such a reply.
Re:web browser for freebsd? (Score:2)
As far as I can remember, Quake was designed and built on NeXT machines, BTW.
The minds behind the production of the current Mac OS are the types that would run something like FreeBSD as a desktop. It's those types that create. The types who share your attitude are the types that take whatever is given to them, are not creative and try to appear like they matter when all they're really good at is shooting shit in Quake.