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Posts tagged with "opera9"

OperaFox 0.9, the new Munin

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After Hugin, here's the 9.x update for Munin. But it's now called OperaFox. Munin was originally designed as a simplified Opera, inspired by Firefox. But since Opera 8, the default Opera setup is already simplified and hides the mail stuff etc. So while I still use Hugin myself, I don't use Munin anymore.

OperaFox 0.9
For those who like the Firefox experience, here's a setup that tries to mimic the Firefox look and feel. You can even download a keyboard shortcuts setup that makes Opera behave just like Firefox/MSIE (at the cost of making some Opera-specific shortcuts more complex). The toolbar and menu should both the installed for this setup to work correctly. The shortcuts are optional. The nice skin using Firefox and Thunderbird icons was made by Ralf Demuth.

Edit 2007-04-17: the links point to 9.2-compatible setups now



9.10 fraud protection compared with other browsers

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Asa's blog postings didn't get much comments recently (not that many people interested in space exploration, and it will be some months before FF3 gets interesting), so he posted about Opera 9.10. Even though he wasn't offensive, he's still accused of baiting Opera fans :smile:

On the substance: it will indeed be interesting to see if independent studies will detect differences in protection level between the new browsers, because the three browsers have very different implementations!

IE 7: asks you to enable anti-phishing on first start, uses (IIANM) both heuristics and a whitelist in the browser, and callbacks to servers in Redmont. The latter could be problematic, not everyone trusts Microsoft with their browsing history...

FF 2: doesn't ask, but enables blacklisting with regularly (every hour) downloaded blacklists. Might give OK results if the quality of their blacklists is good, but the timing is important. You can enable real-time fraudchecks using a Google service, but that requires clicking 'OK' on a dialog that tells you Google will store your browsing history... The testing they did themselves show a slight increase in effectiveness after enabling this.

Opera 9.1: doesn't ask, but gives an easy way to check the status of individual sites (if you are curious enough to click the '?' in the address field, you'll find this option). You can enable real-time checking from this dialog (and from the Preferences), where Opera doesn't asks you click 'OK' on a big warning dialog, because there is nothing to want about. Opera doesn't store your browsing information or cookies or IP addresses etc. The only thing the Opera sitecheck server remembers will be what sites the collective Opera users have asked for in the past few days. There is the full documentation available.

Recent research has shown that many phishing scams operate only for a few dozen hours, presumably making most of their victims in the first hours. So it makes sense to use real-time checking against regularly updated servers. None of the tested services get a perfect score, though there are certainly differences. Opera hopes that combining the GeoTrust and PhishTank databases will give at least as good results for our users.

I encourage everyone to register an account on PhishTank, and spend a few minutes every week in verifying suspected phish sites. And I also encourage everyone to install Opera 9.10 for their less websavvy friends and relatives, and enable fraud protection for them!

9.10 is final - and so is Hugin 2.5

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Yippee, 9.10 is final. High time to update the downloadable custom setups I've made. I'll try to get this working with my.opera.com's system later, but for now I'll use my own webspace. First one:

Hugin 2.5
Hugin is a custom setup for a dedicated Mail & Chat client. It makes the power of M2 visible in menus and shortcuts and button - and makes it possible to keep mail and browsing separate processes, which has pros and cons. Normal browser functionality is mostly removed, so create a separate Opera installation for this one. You can open weblinks in a simple web tab. But you can also open them in your normal browser installation, with the link context menu. The toolbar and menu should both the installed for this setup to work!

Edit 2007-04-17: the links point to 9.2-compatible setups now





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