Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 13th Feb 2013 13:21 UTC
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RE[3]: Opera doesn't want to be populair
by PresentIt on Wed 13th Feb 2013 21:22
in reply to "RE[2]: Opera doesn't want to be populair"
RE[4]: Opera doesn't want to be populair
by Fergy on Mon 18th Feb 2013 21:14
in reply to "RE[3]: Opera doesn't want to be populair"
How does this mean that Opera will be a follower? Who was following Opera? Not web developers, that's for sure!
Won't this make innovation even easier for Opera since they don't have to work on compatibility problems most of the time anymore?
Won't this make innovation even easier for Opera since they don't have to work on compatibility problems most of the time anymore?
They certainly have taken the first step towards making it easier for web developers. Next step is removing another browser from the web to make it easier for web developers. How web developers must long for the days when they only had to develop for one browser.
RE[3]: Opera doesn't want to be populair
by zima on Mon 18th Feb 2013 21:07
in reply to "RE[2]: Opera doesn't want to be populair"
I always felt Mozilla and Opera were the innovators of the web. So you can understand that when Opera announces they will be a follower from now on it feels like a kick in the nuts for me.
But they didn't announce to be a follower - Opera will surely contribute to Webkit in major ways. Maybe even leaving greater mark on the web than before.
RE[4]: Opera doesn't want to be populair
by Fergy on Mon 18th Feb 2013 21:11
in reply to "RE[3]: Opera doesn't want to be populair"
But they didn't announce to be a follower - Opera will surely contribute to Webkit in major ways. Maybe even leaving greater mark on the web than before.
They went with webkit because they wanted to spend less on the engine. They also fired a large portion of their engine people.





Member since:
2006-04-10
You are wrong, of course. People don't care about the engine. They care about the user experience and features.
Kicking the web in the nuts? How so? It wasn't really making it easier or harder for web developers because web developers mostly ignored Presto. Opera moving to WebKIt won't mean sh*t for the web because Presto doesn't mean anything.
I don't know about how popular Opera was but I always felt Mozilla and Opera were the innovators of the web. So you can understand that when Opera announces they will be a follower from now on it feels like a kick in the nuts for me.