The new Opera preview version covers Windows, Linux, Solaris and FreeBSD OSes. Changelog:* New – Chat File Transfer *
Opera Chat now has the ability to send and receive files from other chat clients. To initiate a transfer, right-click another user’s nickname in the nick list and choose “Send file…”. Transferred files will display in the Transfers panel/window with a green down arrow if they’re downloads and a red up arrow if they’re uploads.
* Manage Dialogs are Back! *
After a lot of valuable feedback, the Manage dialogs for Bookmarks, Contacts, Links, and History, as well as the Transfer window, are back. They can be accessed by their keyboard shortcuts or from the Tools menu. The maximized panels are still available too, and can be activated using their Ctrl+Shift+# (0 to 9) keyboard shortcuts or by double-clicking on the panel selector button.
* Drastically Improved Threading *
Threading of e-mail and newsgroup messages should be greatly improved with this release. There were some serious problems, especially when you started a thread.
* SDI Feels the Love *
SDI has received some much-needed attention. For instance, keyboard shortcuts for opening and closing pages and windows have been improved and windows close when you close the last page. It should be a much more comfortable experience for SDI users.
* Fixed Margin Collapsing Issues *
The display issues at LiveJournal.com have been fixed. Other web pages that had large gaps since 7.50 Preview 1 should also display better now.
* New – System Tray Icon * (Windows only)
For even better notification of new messages (and perhaps more later), Opera now has a system tray icon. When you receive new messages in the Unread view, it will change to an envelope. You can also focus or exit Opera from the icon’s context menu.
* Better Message Selection *
Opera now does a better job displaying the message most relevant to you when you open a Mail view. Selected messages are also remembered across sessions, so you’ll never again have to find the message you were looking at last time you used Opera.
Release notes and download for Windows.
Release notes and download for “*nixies”.
This browser used to be good then it got really comercialized and in my opinion got bloated. I’m still going to stick with firefox. Fast. Small. Free.
Just downloaded and installed, quite a difference between it and the earlier 7.x releases. I’m not sure if I like the Office-esque sidebar thingy, but it’s easy enough to turn off.
After using Firebird/Fox for so long, I’d almost forgotten how speedy/responsive this thing is.
Opera is a heck of a lot faster, more feature packed, and lighter than any Gecko-browser, even K-meleon let alone Firefox.
to anonymous: I agree with SthepenB, just download it and see by yourself..:-)
Outstanding..:-)
will it happen?
Hi
Tried it out. Firefox is better
* Speed
* Free and open source(not adware/proprietary)
* Support for a large number of extensions
* Better interface
* Better popup blocking
* Better privacy controls
* Better support for importing bookmarks from all browsers
and so on
Jess
But Firefox is faster..Cos everyone says so. Yes sir it’s much faster than mozilla and every other browser out there.
Ok, joking aside. Here is a newsflash. Firefox is not any faster than moz. It’s the same old moz in a new packaging & without the mail client. I realize that placebos about its speed are hard to break, but face it: Firefox performs only as well as gecko.
Oh please
Yes, please make a systray!
This browser used to be good then it got really comercialized and in my opinion got bloated. I’m still going to stick with firefox. Fast. Small. Free.
Doesn’t matter how Opera has add a lot of more features; it doesn’t mean you have to use them. They can be invisible. Also, have you ever noticed how much size is Opera compares to Firefox even when Opera has a lot of more features and yet it’s still very small and fast.
* Speed: Opera is faster, no doubts.
* Free and open source(not adware/proprietary): what is the problem here?? Work for free? Mozilla group receives a lot of money from sponsors.
* Support for a large number of extensions: be more specific.
* Better interface: it’s your point-of-view.
* Better popup blocking: be more specific
* Better privacy controls: be more specific
* Better support for importing bookmarks from all browsers: be more specific
Hi
“Firefox performs only as well as gecko.”
thats true and did you realise that gecko is very fast and the reason for mozilla’s slowness is their bloated interface.
firefox has a better interface and less features with everything else available as extensions. opera’s extra features arent invisible at all. they cannot be disabled either. firefox is reaching a better market share due to many things. one of which it is not adware but free software
Jess
Hi
” Speed: Opera is faster, no doubts.
* Free and open source(not adware/proprietary): what is the problem here?? Work for free? Mozilla group receives a lot of money from sponsors.
buddy. this is not about money and yes i volunteer is several such programs.
* Support for a large number of extensions: be more specific.
how i can be more specific. check here
http://texturizer.net/firebird/extensions/
* Better interface: it’s your point-of-view.
yes and its generally recognised. want to test this?. pull out someone new and tell them to use both browsers and watch them
* Better popup blocking: be more specific
its blocked by default and a very nice explanation is given when its done for the first time and it supports more popup blocking than opera does for example) popups over a text field. check with a popup checking website.
* Better privacy controls: be more specific
if you bother to do this download the latest build of firefox and check under preferences.
* Better support for importing bookmarks from all browsers: be more specific
it supports bookmark importing more than opera.how can i be more specific than this?
regards
Jess
Alright everyone pay attention.
The fastest graphical, modern browser on the x86 platform (meaning KHTML, Gecko, Opera, and IE) when rendering complicated table and graphical layouts as most web pages are is without a doubt Microsoft Internet Explorer.
Anyone that says otherwise simply isn’t making an accurate judgement. As on even remotely modern hardware, (200Mhz+) the speed difference between these browsers is very slight, it is not surprising many find their favorite to be the fastest.
I deal with very old systems every day – this post is being submitted from a 486/DX2 66Mhz. I challenge anyone to use a computer this slow and come back and tell me IE isn’t the fastest browser, as the differences become very apparent at this level.
(Opera may gain speed parity if system memory is below 32MB however)
Hi
“486/DX2 66Mhz. I challenge anyone to use a computer this slow and come back and tell me IE isn’t the fastest browser, as the differences become very apparent at this level. ”
IE surely seems faster because it loads within the operating systems itself. when you click on IE it immediately popups up because some of it is already in memory.
when IE implements tabs,popup blocking, adheres to standards, doesnt enable activex it can be a good browser. till then its not even competing
regards
Jess
Hi..
I’ll tell you.. I use Linux only (gentoo), is it proprietary? Of course not. Gentoo it’s a outstanding project, my point-of-view, of course.
I have Firefox here in my machine, and from my perspective, there are no real advantages that makes me to use it.
You can download and use Opera, free of charge, but if you want to add some extra services (like e-mail premium service, personal support, and so on), you can pay for them. I ask you again: what is the problem?
BTW, did you bought Mozilla.org software CD? Of course that you can’t be forced to bought it, as well as about Opera. It’s a question of choice, option.
Many of “extensions” that you cited above are embedded onto Opera. And you can see, I’m using Opera 5-shared-qt 7.5 p3: only 3.5MB to download it. What about firefox?
Opera has M2 (great e-mail client), download manager, IRC embedded, Newsfeeds manager, Newsgroups manager, pop-ups blocker, mouse gestures, and more…
About block Pop-ups: just open Opera and, if you want, press F12 and block all pop-ups. What is the firefox main advantage in this case?
About privacy controls, Opera is great, I really don’t understando what want to say.
Bookmarks importing:
Opera menu bar: select View >> Import >>
Netscape bookmarks
MSIE favorites
KDE1 bookmarks
Konqueror bookmarks
The fastest graphical, modern browser on the x86 platform (meaning KHTML, Gecko, Opera, and IE) when rendering complicated table and graphical layouts as most web pages are is without a doubt Microsoft Internet Explorer.
Several people seem to mention this every time speed is mentioned in regards to browsers. I simply haven’t found it to be the case. I’ve certainly seen layouts where IE outperformed both Gecko based browsers and Opera, but in general I’ve seen several cases where both Opera and Gecko based browsers (Firefox) outperform IE.
I deal with very old systems every day – this post is being submitted from a 486/DX2 66Mhz. I challenge anyone to use a computer this slow and come back and tell me IE isn’t the fastest browser, as the differences become very apparent at this level.
Have you tried Opera on that system? I’ll admit I’ve never used Opera in conjunction with Windows on hardware that old, so I can’t gauge the relative speed, but Opera was still phenominally fast on a 486 DX4/133 running FreeBSD.
Opera’s main performance limitation on older hardware seems to be the speed at which it paints the window after an expose event, at least under X. The Windows version doesn’t seem to have this issue, but isn’t based on Qt, which may explain the difference.
As far as Firefox versus Opera goes, at first it seemed as if Firefox was dramatically faster than Opera, but after trying a number of different sites I began to see several layouts which Opera clearly had an easier time with. I’m reluctant to say whether Firefox or Opera is “faster”, or which seems faster on a majority of pages… it really varies depends on the layout, and even when rendering standards compliant XHTML sites the speed seems to vary quite a bit.
So, back to the topic at hand… does Opera 7.50 preview 3 fix anyone’s nags from the previous two versions? My experience was that the “start pane”, even when configured to act similar to earlier Opera versions’ “Hotbar”, is still highly obtrusive. Have the Opera programmers managed to tame it to something a bit more sane?
I was referring to the speed at which the browser renders pages, not loads. In fact I just downloaded the latest Opera beta and its getting close to IEs loading speed. Personally I use Opera for standards support but I see many people argue that Firefox is faster as a reason to switch from IE, and Opera calls itself the fastest browser. Both of those claims simply aren’t true.
IE surely seems faster because it loads within the operating systems itself. when you click on IE it immediately popups up because some of it is already in memory.
when IE implements tabs,popup blocking, adheres to standards, doesnt enable activex it can be a good browser. till then its not even competing
Opera is getting close with the 7.5 series to the point where I can’t say with certainty that IE is faster. I’m still pretty sure about the latest release (7.2) however, and IE is still better at refreshing the screen when scrolling.
Another advantage IE has however is that it is the only browser other than Konqueror on Linux that uses native widgets (some Mozilla variants use them for the browser interface, but not for things such as text boxes). On most processors slower than 80Mhz menus and typing in text boxes tend to bog down the rest of the browsing experience.
Have you tried Opera on that system? I’ll admit I’ve never used Opera in conjunction with Windows on hardware that old, so I can’t gauge the relative speed, but Opera was still phenominally fast on a 486 DX4/133 running FreeBSD.
opera’s extra features arent invisible at all. they cannot be disabled either.
Actually, you are very wrong on this one. It can be invisible and disable if you know how to play with the Opera.
I think that the first item that turns a browser to a “good browser” is the “cross platform” concept. Without this concept in mind, I don’t believe that could be possible validate if a browser is good or no..
Hi
the importing is still better with firefox. it supports more browsers. if want a kitchensink browser you should use the mozilla suite not firefox. the popup advantage can only be tested with a popup checking site. try that.
only 3.5MB to download
thats because you already got qt installed. the extensions of firefox go far beyond opera’s capabilities. if you dont use it you dont get to know it. i cant list each and every one of them.
since you use gentoo which has a social commitment towards being free I would say that you are more suited. let me know any reason you use opera rather than firefox. in which way is opera really better?
regards
Jess
If only Firefox extensions weren’t completely useless and buggy, slowing down the whole browser, don’t integrate well, conflict with each other, and never quite work as they should.
Firefox is a nice concept, but the implementation is flawed at best.
I don’t care about free. I care about using what makes my life easier. Opera does. Firefox doesn’t. In fact, it is the exact opposite.
Now stop discussing Firefox here. It’s an Opera announcement. If you like Firefox, fine. But let those of us who prefer a better browser talk about that browser here.
I’ll tell you..
I used Netscape since OS/2 Warp 3.0 and was great, the better…Netscape Classic, a killer browser. If Moziila.org had not stopped that application and attempted to reinvent the wheel, then Mozilla/Netscape would be the best with certainty, but it isn’t. It is a goob browser (firefox included), but Opera is so good as Mozilla/Netscape (firefox included), it is more practical to dowload, it has many useful features, it is fast enougth, very customizable, safety, and so on…
I respect your opinions, I just can’t to agree with most of them… I don’t want to start a flame, is a questoin of options (point-of-views), only…:-)
Apologize me for the English mine, it isn’t my native language…:-)
best wishes
I’ve bought the licence for Linux, Windows and Symbian s60 Opera. I would love Opera only on one platform too, but gotta say it’s very nice to have an exactly identical interface to manage mail & web whether I’m at home or at work… (s60 is a bit different though 😉
(I also use Gaim for additional synergy 🙂
Opera is simply more customisable, has advanced features that are easier to use and just plain ‘feels’ faster.
Just one example (of many) why it’s still my main browser: The mouse gestures implementation with Opera is flawless. Firefox with the mouse gesture extensions feels, and is, ‘tacked’ on.
Hi
“Just one example (of many) why it’s still my main browser: The mouse gestures implementation with Opera is flawless. Firefox with the mouse gesture extensions feels, and is, ‘tacked’ on.”
I cant really report a bug which says that. if we can be more specific, we can probably get a better implementation.
” a killer browser. If Moziila.org had not stopped that application and attempted to reinvent the wheel, then Mozilla/Netscape”
i know the development intimately and i assure you it was done out of necessity. the old netscape code was tied up to the proprietary toolkit and wasnt feasible to pull out the engine at all.
we got gecko now and we have a good implementation on it called firefox. it was slow but not reinventing the wheel at all. xul is one of the best toolkits thats based on xml.
regards
Jess
the extensions of firefox go far beyond opera’s capabilities. if you dont use it you dont get to know it. i cant list each and every one of them.
Fast forward and rewind have been a staple Opera feature since 7.1. I can’t find a Firefox extension which implements these features.
Opera attempts to describe the operation of fast forward/rewind here, but it’s a bit terse:
http://www.opera.com/features/fforward/
To really get an idea of how they work you really need to use them, though.
For Opera
ksystraycmd opera
and guess what for Mozilla it is:
ksystraycmd mozilla
Enjoy
Fab
Hi
”
Fast forward and rewind have been a staple Opera feature since 7.1. I can’t find a Firefox extension which implements these features.
”
use the navigation extensions. i have used opera and this one implements it using the same href link. it has the same limitation that all websites do not provide this capability
regards
Jess
does this version work fine on a stock FreeBSD 5.2.1-RELEASE?
Yes, as long you install misc/compat4x.
Hi
no.freebsd compat is broken and bug reports are getting ignored. worthless shit for now
BSDtool
I HATE the panel thing over on the left edge. I don’t ever want to see it reduced to icons if I’m not using it, I don’t want to see it at all. Why couldn’t they just go back to the old way of F4 toggles it on or off?
Hi,
When talking about speed, I think most people mean that Opera is far more responsive than any other browser (at least on Win)… To prove that, do the following:
Open a new browser window and go to a location x… then click on links so that the new site is opened in the same window… Do that for… let’s say 10 sites.
Now see how fast you can browse back (using back button) in Opera compared with others… The same goes for the stop button: it takes ages for IE to interrupt loading/rendering of complex/big pages whereas it is almost immediate in Opera.
This is just an example. Another interesting thing is how precise the status bar is when comparing with other browsers,… Add to that the download manager where you can do all operations on any files (delete a file, open with,… just like in explorer),…
IE has a good/fast renderer but when it comes to reponsiveness, even my old Amiga/50Mhz is faster: this is not acceptable for me.
(My pc=XP1800/512Mo)
Regards,
Leo.
Opera isn’t the fastest browser to start up but it is the smallest and thus consumes the least memory. Back before when I only had 128MB of RAM, it was a pain to switch between browser tabs in Firefox and Konqueror when I had a bunch open. With Opera, switching around to inactive windows was a snap. And it was nice to have it not suck up more memory to do the email as well. No other browser/mail combo can boast that: IE/OE, Mozilla, Firefox/Thunderbird.
Now if you have a fast system with lots of RAM, the Opera small size advantage isn’t as much of a factor. I do wish they’d add a highlight option like IE has, though.
Does firefox have a zoom like Opera yet? Zoom is one of the most important browser features for me. 1600×1200 is low res for me, (I am often higher)and being able to zoom the entire page and not just the font is very valuable to me. Last I checked, the other browsers didn’t do this. Has this changed recently??? Mouse gestures are important too, and last I checked, the other browsers had no, or poor implementation of it…
Firefox has a cooler icon
Firefox can go up to like 800% IIRC. But I wish you could turn off image zooming in Opera. It annoys me to have to zoom the pictures to screwed up sizes when all I want is bigger text.
“Firefox can go up to like 800% IIRC. But I wish you could turn off image zooming in Opera. It annoys me to have to zoom the pictures to screwed up sizes when all I want is bigger text.”
— We like the exact opposite things. It is the fact that other browsers don’t zoom the images that makes me dislike them. It doesn’t do me any good to zoom the font, when I want to get a better view of the “tiny” pictures without changing my desktop resolution…
“IE surely seems faster because it loads within the operating systems itself. when you click on IE it immediately popups up because some of it is already in memory.
when IE implements tabs,popup blocking, adheres to standards, doesnt enable activex it can be a good browser. till then its not even competing”
IE is much faster in rendering web-sites and even more so in windows 98se. All thoe it’s fast in my windows XP I rarly use it at all. When I do use it thoe I have the active x and a lot of other things turned totaly off to make the browser safer. In really because I only go to a few news sites popups for me is not a issue if I use IE even thoe most of the time I’m in Mozilla simply because I feel safer. I offten think about the speed I’m missing thoe and sites simply working better in IE ~~~
–Idoxash
The reason why I use Firefox instead of Opera is two-fold:
1. Firefox has a feature to block pop-ups, except for specific sites. I have found that on both Opera and FF, sometimes they block ‘legitimate’ pop-up windows, even with Opera’s Requested feature turned on. (Granted, it’s because of bad HTML coding that this happens, but that’s beside the point.) Since I visit a couple of these sites frequestnly, it gets annoying constantly having to do the ‘F12 shuffle’ in Opera.
2. Firefox has the ability to edit bookmarks on the personal toolbar MENU by right clicking on them.
I’ve tried Moz 1.6 and it seems really fast (are they using a lot of FF code now? I thought the two browsers were going to merge), but Moz is missing the bookmark/right-click ability that FF has, that is an essential feature for me .. even IE has it
In windows, there are many browser based on IE I can use, In Linux, I can use firefox, if firefox can’t browse the page(maybe IE specific), I can use konqueror instead.
I used to use Opera, but was forced to switch to FireFox because I needed to visit some site that needs NTLM authentication. Now I have configured an NTLM proxy ( http://www.geocities.com/rozmanov/ntlm/ ) so I could use Opera again.
On Linux, I usually leave my browser open 24/7. I have 10-20 tabs open in Opera, and it remains very responsive even after 1 week’s use.
FireFox (I used the gtk2 build) was nice at first, but if you ran it for one day or two, it became unusable: scrolling, switching between tabs, doing anything were just incredibly slow and rendered the browser unusable without a restart.
I can’t believe!!!
This was started as a thread about Opera and now…
The main question is: If you like Opera use it and you’ll be happy, if you have no ideia about Opera, plese, attempt to acquire a better knowledge about this great browser and decide by yourself (I expect that you decide pro Opera), and last (but not least), if you don’t like Opera then don’t use it, it’s so simple, but stop to create useless flames or “religious discussions” about software…arghhhh
damn, this thing is quick… if this is beta, the final release is going to be amazing.
Hmmm… The 7.5 series works on FreeBSD 5.2.1 for me. No plugin support, of course, but that’s probably not going to happen until 5.x is tagged -STABLE.
Bascule –
“So, back to the topic at hand… does Opera 7.50 preview 3 fix anyone’s nags from the previous two versions? My experience was that the ‘start pane,’ even when configured to act similar to earlier Opera versions’ ‘Hotbar,’ [Hotlist?] is still highly obtrusive. Have the Opera programmers managed to tame it to something a bit more sane?”
Yes. Go to Windows preferences and check “Allow empty workspace” and it’s less obtrusive yet. Wish that were checked by default.
Re the Anonymous who said “I HATE the panel thing over on the left edge. I don’t ever want to see it reduced to icons if I’m not using it, I don’t want to see it at all. Why couldn’t they just go back to the old way of F4 toggles it on or off?” –
You can of course configure it to do that in the keyboard preferences, or you can click the 4-px-wide toggle at the left to turn both selectors (the icons) and panels on and off at once.
I personally have configured the mouse preferences to (1) open and close panel and iconbar with mouse button “flipping” (left-click followed by right-click or vice versa); (2) dump cache with the “up” mouse gesture (move mouse cursor up a few pixels while right-clicking and voila!); and (3) turn the pagebar on and off with the “down” mouse gesture. These are of course besides the built-in gestures such as right and left for Forward and Back navigation. (For a real treat, find a directory full of pictures and use the Forward gesture to turn it into a slide show.) If you prefer using the keyboard, you can customize keyboard commands instead (or as well). You can even download files where other Opera users have done keyboard and mouse customizations for you.
Not bad for 3.6MB on Win, 4 or 5MB on *nix.
Back and forth. Back and forth. Well here’s my two cents. I have an old 486 laptop with a *small* hard drive and memory. Went looking for a modern browser (it has IE 2.0) that would install and give me the big three i.e. Browsing, Newsgroups, and E-Mail. IE was out because it wouldn’t even install(1). Mozilla ran into the same problem. Opera was the only one that would install and *run* (I had to go to the 6.x versions because the 7.x would crash unless I went to a different “and bad” video mode). It started up *slow* but once up it was acceptable.
(1) Yes I tried the derivatives. Then DLL hell took over after that.
From what i have seen flash is extremely slow on gtk2 builds of mozilla. On linux the fastest and most responsive browser is opera. Firefox has the best interface and i like free software. The opera ads are seriously killing me. on windows most people say IE is slow because they don’t disable page transitions.
Personally, I think even if you’re poor it’s worth saving 40 bucks for the most frequently used application on your PC. (Over 12 months that’s $3.33/month.) For the most frequently used application, I don’t understand why “it’s free” seems to be mentioned as much as it is.
Anyway, if you won’t pay for Opera and can’t stand the banner ads, remember that with 7.5 you can make much more minimal than in previous versions! Just right click the top (main) toolbar, click “customize toolbars”, and turn that toolbar off. The ad banner becomes a very narrow strip and is much less obtrusive. Opera won’t, of course, remember this setting, but it’s still requires only a second to do every time you start Opera.
And for those that still think the interface wastes a lot of space, remember there’s a lot of things you can do to improve it. Instead of complaining, download a few skins and try them out (yes,the default skins suck). The ones available aren’t *all* tacky (tho many of them are). Choose a *condensed* font (maybe not Arial Narrow tho) for your menus – this in itself saves a *lot* of space and makes Opera look far better.
Opera’s degree of customizability sets it apart. This is one reason I’m willing to pay 40 bucks for it.
“Opera’s degree of customizability sets it apart. This is one reason I’m willing to pay 40 bucks for it.”
I totally agree, there’s no other browser that I can set up exactly how I want. People talk about the extensions that are available for Firefox, but IME a lot of them are very problematic. Adding features such as saved window sessions and mouse gestures made it very unstable and weren’t very functional. I’m not going to waste hours playing with extensions when the features built into Opera work so much better.
With Opera you can have a very complex and feature rich browser with sidebars, multiple toolbars, personal bars, etc. Or you can strip it down so that you have an almost blank screen and control the browser with the keyboard or mouse gestures. IMO it’s GUI is far better than any of the free browsers and that makes a big difference to how much I enjoy web browsing.
I am using Opera 7.22 and do not find the banner ads intrusive or annoying at all. I simply configured the ads to show text ads from Google rather than the default graphical ads. I don’t really notice them at all unless I choose to notice them.
I’ve been using Opera since version 3.5 for Windows, and now that I am on Linux, it remains my browser of choice.
I gotta agree with most comments here. Opera on linux is the fastest and most cusomizible. I have tried and used firefox, firebird, mozilla, and netscape. They are not bad browsers at all, but they all have one major problem: When you press the back button it takes a lot longer than in opera to display the page. Thats really a fact. This is the single reason that i ditched them all. Yes, opera is not perfect since on some sites it just won’t display the page properly. But these sites are rare, and i just use one of the alternative browsers on them. The ads aren’t that annoying at all nowadays in 7.50. And for those who think that ads degrade performance are wrong: the ads are downloaded into its cache every week ( i think) and used from there.
As for IE, yes, it is the fastest browser on Windows, i can’t argue with that. And it also displays all the pages perfectly since web masters just follow whatever IE works best with. But you can’t also argue with the fact that IE has looked the same since 4.0, worked the same, and has had the same things going for it. Most people won’t be able to tell the difference between 4.0 and 6.0. And it has no popup blocking built in so you have to install a separate popup blocker which, as far as i know, takes up at least some system resources.
Opera is just too cluttered looking for me. It renders poorly in comparison to firefox also. The speed doesn’t matter much as it take opera about 2 seconds to load and firefox takes 3-4. For my tastes firefox has a cleaner and simpler interface that does everything I want it to do. I don’t see a reason anymore for anyone to buy a browser when there are comparable free ones.
OK, I said I didn’t like the hammer and sickle in Firefox. Have you people never noticed it in Firefox or something?
Of course, you have. I’m sure of that.
Did I violate any term?
No, because I didn’t meant to offend anybody.
What I meant is that I hate to see all that political stuff in software today.
Anyway, fuck it. No more decent words. It just doesn’t help anymore these days.
Well, I’m bloody sick of you fuckers! OSNEWS SUCKS and you Eugenia Loli-Queru bitch can SUCK MY ARSE!
If you don’t have any respect for my opinion and moderate me down EVEN IF I DID NOT BREAK WITH ANY TERM,
you can DROP DEAD, GO TO HELL and GO FUCK YOURSELF!
Don’t want hatred? I don’t give a damn! People like you are those who create hatred!
death and destruction to Osnews.com!
Have a nice day suckers.