Opera 10 Beta Released

Posted on June 3rd, 2009 | 1 Comment »

Opera 10 beta, codenamed “Peregrine,” was released today.  The high-level features touted on the Opera 10 website are:

  • “Opera Turbo for fast browsing on slow connections” – this is essentially the same technology used by Opera Mini to compress content, saving bandwidth and time.
  • “New visual tabs and sleek design” – the new design was previously covered here.
  • “Speed Dial your way” – users now have the option of customizing the number of websites displayed or the background.
  • “Web integration” – tell Opera to use your web-based email client or feed reader as the default for email and feeds, respectively, and it will.
  • “Resizable search field”
  • “40% faster engine and cutting-edge Web standards support”

While the bulk of those features are notable, it’s pretty obvious that the new visual changes will get the most immediate attention, followed by reviews of the underlying rendering engine, Presto 2.2, once people get some subjective and objective experience with it (does anyone still use a slow connection on their desktop anymore?).

For more on the web standards support added to Presto 2.2, check out Standards support in Opera Presto 2.2 and Opera 10 beta, which among other things, confirms that Opera 10 beta passes the Acid3 test.

To kick the tires on this latest release from Opera, download Opera 10 beta today.

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Digg Watch #5

Posted on December 31st, 2008 | No Comments »

Let’s take a look at what web browser news has surfaced over at Digg over the past month:

And now for some bonus coverage from Slashdot:

Happy New Year, everybody.

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Testing WebKit Nightlies on Windows

Posted on July 8th, 2008 | 5 Comments »

Anyone who has followed the support for web standards in today’s popular web browsers knows that the WebKit rendering engine has been at the forefront of that support.  Therefore, if you’re a browserphile like me, there’s a good chance you’re interested in testing out the latest and greatest WebKit build so you can see what all the fuss is about.  The following is a step-by-step list of things I had to do to get WebKit nightly builds working on my Windows computer.

  1. Download and install the Safari web browser for Windows.
  2. Download the latest WebKit nightly build for Windows.
  3. Unzip the contents of the download to a location like C:\Program Files\WebKit Nightlies.
  4. In the contents of the extracted folder, run (either from the command line or by double-clicking on the file) run-nightly-webkit.cmd.
  5. Watch as several necessary files are copied over to your Safari installation directory.
  6. If Safari launches and then crashes, fear not.  First try running the run-nightly-webkit.cmd file again.  If the crashing persists, work backward through the Windows Nightly Build Archive until you find a working build.  Remember, nightly builds are almost always considered dangerous (which is why the Firefox nightlies are called “Minefield“) so it may take some tinkering around before you find a good one.  The last good one I found at the time of writing was r34388.
  7. If Safari launches and renders the default start page, you’re in business.

If you want to verify that you’re indeed using the WebKit nightly build you downloaded and not the default Safari rendering engine included with the latest version (3.1.2 at the time of writing), an easy way to check is to head on over to the Acid3 test.

This is what the test looks like in Safari 3.1.2:

Screenshot of Acid3 in Safari 3.1.2

And here is what it looks like in WebKit nightly build r34388:

Screenshot of Acid3 Test in WebKit Nightly Build r34388

Pretty cool!

I’d be remiss not to mention Swapnonil Mukherjee’s previous post on the subject, which proved to be a pretty good guide to getting a WebKit nightly build running on my computer.

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Some IE Photos

Posted on July 8th, 2008 | 1 Comment »

The following is a picture of the cake the IE team sent over to the Mozilla folks when they shipped Firefox 3:

Cake Sent to Mozilla by the IE Team

And the following is a mashup of the IE logo and the acid code (presumably from the Acid3 test?) via Twitter:

IE on acid Logo on Flickr

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Around the Browsersphere #10

Posted on May 11th, 2008 | 5 Comments »

There are some rumblings in the browsersphere as of late with a Firefox 3 RC1 release right around the corner, news that the latest service pack for XP isn’t compatible with a pre-installed IE8 Beta 1, etc.  So let’s get caught up.

General

Avant

Firefox

Flock

Internet Explorer

Konqueror

Maxthon

Opera

Opera Mini

Safari

Minor Players

Web Standards

Holy cow.  That’s a lot of information.  The browsersphere is a bustling place.  Hopefully you found something useful in all that.

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Digg Watch #3

Posted on April 20th, 2008 | 2 Comments »

It’s been a few months since we caught up with the popular web browser-related submissions on Digg, so let’s do something about that:

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Around the Browsersphere #8

Posted on March 9th, 2008 | 2 Comments »

With at least a couple more Firefox 3 betas on the way, the release of IE8 Beta 1 and the official release of the Acid3 test, there’s a lot going on in the browsersphere these days.  Let’s jump right into it…

Amazingly enough, there’s a lot more to post about, but that should hold you over for a little bit.  I’m interested in hearing if Browsersphere visitors are more interested in somewhat random links like this or if it would be preferable to have the links broken down by the web browser to which they correspond.  If you have any thoughts on that, please leave a comment.

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