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I don't get it.
You either don't really know that Opera 10 will have auto-updates or you forcibly don't want to acknowledge this.
The thread you linked to has some users alerting to the fact that Opera lack of self-updating is soon to be fixed. As some users in here also have pointed that out.
True it hasn't been doing so this far, but this ought to be changed very soon.
Also on top of the self-updating feature I think all browsers should have a limited timeframe on which they could browse the web - for example, two years. After that it can only access offline\intranet webpages forcibly causing users\admins to update to the new version.
My uni still has Firefox 2 on most computers - others have version 3 beta 5, and it doesn't look like they will update soon.
http://my.opera.com/desktopteam/blog/2009/05/13/auto-updated-alread... -- Opera's working on an auto-update.
I tested it for this build of Opera 10 and it worked in about the same way that Firefox's works: It downloaded the update, then installed it. Sure Opera's looked more like it was installing the program again, but I suspect Firefox's works in a similar fashion, but the install processes are wrapped to a nicer (and more automated) GUI.
Yeah, Opera's late on one feature, but I forgive them for all of the other stuff they've pioneered.
I've been an Opera user forever, but I still treat it like my dirty secret: I tell people "Yeah, but I use a web browser that most people don't. You've got Firefox on your machine, right?" even though I pretty much hate Firefox.
I do advocate Chrome, though. Whole-heartedly.




Member since:
2005-06-29
It's demonstrably NOT better.
http://www.osnews.com/story/21445/Chrome_Users_Most_Up_to_Date_Fire...
This means that Opera users are generally less secure - browser-wise - than users of Firefox and Chrome. Opera's lack of an updating mechanism is simply BRAINDEAD and INEXCUSABLE.