Comments on: Opera nixes banner ads in free version
Looking to broaden usage, Opera Software eliminates banner advertising in its latest version.
Images: A free pass to the Opera
Looking to broaden usage, Opera Software eliminates banner advertising in its latest version.
Images: A free pass to the Opera
December 29, 2009 8:30 PM PST
December 29, 2009 3:53 PM PST
December 29, 2009 2:50 PM PST
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Everything I've read about the browser has sung nothing but praises for its execution. I can see this really taking off. Heck, I'm an IE guy and I'm considering giving it a shot.
Everything I've read about the browser has sung nothing but praises for its execution. I can see this really taking off. Heck, I'm an IE guy and I'm considering giving it a shot.
They are cutting off their biggest revenue stream. I certainly hope they're getting somewhere with their mobile browser in terms of licensing fees because they just cut off the hand that fed them.
They are cutting off their biggest revenue stream. I certainly hope they're getting somewhere with their mobile browser in terms of licensing fees because they just cut off the hand that fed them.
- fewer security holes than Firefox or IE!
- by dabruro September 20, 2005 11:28 AM PDT
- Finally a free (as in beer anyway) browser that's *consistently* safer than IE, not just *arguably* safer like the mozilla/gecko-based browsers. I think the only other safe alternatives are khtml-based browsers like konqueror or safari, and these aren't available on Windows. (Well maybe there's KDE under cygwin or something, but let's get real.)
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