You need to be logged in to post in the forums. If you do not have an account, please sign up first.
It would be a big mistake not to release Opera Mini _and_ Opera Mobile on the beautiful platform that MeeGo Harmattan is, given the positive feedback the N9 received since its announcement
.Cheers.
You're the best Mobile Browser on any platform, bring it to the best device

I'll sweeten the deal, if you bring it to the N9 I'll be your bestest friend.
Opera is the only browser which meets my requirements. Fennec and 'Web' lack some important features such as wrapping the text when I zoom in rather than making me side scroll and syncing my bookmarks with the PCs, etc.
I am currently using the unofficial version but would really appreciate the latest one with updates, better keyboard, etc like on Symbian^3.
Btw; did someone get "Opera Link" to work on the unofficial Version? Mine keeps saying "Logging in"...
13. November 2011, 17:57:57 (edited)
Please bring a SwipeUX-based Opera to Maemo6x (MeeGo-Harmattan) & the N9/950 ASAP.
This is Nokia's 1st (sadly their last) true commercial implementation* thanks to lessons learned from the N900.
OPK: "N900 is step 5 of 6...."
Yet proper Opera support is MIA when it wasn't for the N900, seems arse-backwards!?
*mass-market, consumer-focused.
but the only one missing some Opera love is my N9. Please give us a nice Christmas present
It does not offer portrait view, but yes... I agree with the other people here: Official products by Opera, please...
You'll find Opera Mobile 11 (MeeGo)
Originally posted by lukkie:
Guy, you might want to check this link... http://www.opera.com/mobile/download/versions/
You'll find Opera Mobile 11 (MeeGo)
Nokia N9 have Meego Harmattan and uses DEB files and not RPM
that meego version are for more clean meego devices
Originally posted by ryks82:
Originally posted by lukkie:
Guy, you might want to check this link... http://www.opera.com/mobile/download/versions/
You'll find Opera Mobile 11 (MeeGo)
Nokia N9 have Meego Harmattan and uses DEB files and not RPM
that meego version are for more clean meego devices
I installed the 'beta' version of the Opera Mobile 11 using the instructions here >> www.n9fanclub.com/2011/11/how-to-install-opera-mobile-and-root.html
Works fine but u can't manually select an access point. Has a few other quirkies but it's okay until the official Harmattan version comes out. Thanks.
I have always used Opera on every phone and computer that I've used as it's so simple and consistent throughout the changing platforms. (except a little less polished on Ubuntu)
The N9 is amazing... It would be better and more familiar With an opera browser in it.
Originally posted by blomsternisse:
I agree. I'd love to see Opera Mobile officially available at the Nokia Store.
Add my vote to official support from Opera for the Nokia N9.
Note: I would be willing to pay for this browser in the Ovi store (assuming the browser is stable and has good performance etc).
Thanks!!
Right now, N9 users are using a repackaged version of the Labs release of Opera Mobile (post: http://www.n9fanclub.com/2011/11/how-to-install-opera-mobile-and-root.html / video: http://youtu.be/eff_MRQbw0I ), which has 2 major issues: no portrait mode (ie. no rotation detection), and a wonky bottom-right button (to bring back the bottom bar when the page is loaded).
I, for one, would welcome another Labs release, fixing these few quirks, so that the N9 users can enjoy the browser they love.
If there's a kind soul at Opera with enough free time and a big heart, that would be truly awesome.
Originally posted by ccc:
Originally posted by blomsternisse:
I agree. I'd love to see Opera Mobile officially available at the Nokia Store.
Add my vote to official support from Opera for the Nokia N9.
Note: I would be willing to pay for this browser in the Ovi store (assuming the browser is stable and has good performance etc).
Thanks!!
I don't think we should be asking for an "Official release" on the N9 onto the Ovi Store (ie. Opera would have to provide support and future updates for the platform). We should, however, be asking for an updated "Labs" release, fixing the few quirks the current repackaged versions has (ie. full-featured, working version, but without support).
Opera devs are busy supporting a wide range of platforms already, and the previous MeeGo Labs release was done out of kindness during someone's free time from what I understand. Hence why, out of respect for their work, we shouldn't petition for an official release, but rather, a single, "use it at your own risk", updated Labs release for us MeeGo/N9 users.
Opera was doing MeeGo versions because of Intel's involvement, and since under Tizen the WAC library is first-tier and Opera is heavily involved in WAC, I do not believe anyone at Opera gives a
about Nokia and MeeGo 1.2 Harmattan. Which is damn unfortunate, since it's by far the most amazing phone and mobile OS I have ever put my hands on.
However, if someone at Opera would recompile the 11.5 Labs MeeGo build (it exists) for ARM, someone would surely repackage it as DEB and we could try to get it running on the N9.
I have even less hopes for Opera Mini. The community is working on porting the whole java JRE and J2ME libraries to the N9, and then we may be able to use the J2ME Opera Mini, but I don't know if that handles touchscreens or needs a keypad.
I'm also owning the N9 and I'm not at all happy with Nokia and their ridiculous bad management. But I still prefer the open-source platform, the freedom I've with it and of course the fact that the N9 is a very amazing phone. My thanks go to it's developers and it's 3rd party developers, not to any Nokia management or CEO.
But now Opera starts to act similar to Nokia with some intern problems or whatever it is, but at the end it's the users which get hurt.
So please Opera Team let us know if you're working on a N9 version or not - but don't let us in the dark. I hope for the best that I soon can use Opera Mobile (and especially Opera Link) again, because Fennec and Firefox which you make me use now is just never as good as Opera!
15. January 2012, 10:40:59 (edited)
So, Opera's problems are not the infighting that was going on at Nokia, it's just the opposite: someone is deciding what is to be done and what is not based on criteria and not which managers shout hardest, and as far as I can tell, Opera has decided a few years ago to do MeeGo Intel-style (now to be called Tizen). Why would any sane manager put programmers on a version of Opera for a dead system when there's a promise to use the same programmers and do LESS WORK for an OS (Tizen) that promises to give the Opera browser the same place as Mobile Safari has on iOS, which is, SYSTEM LIBRARY?
We just have to lobby Opera to update Opera Mobile for the N9. C'mon Opera, Nokia might have a few N950s left if you register as an N9 developer. Nobody at Opera fancies an N950?
On the surface, it doesn't look like Opera needs to do much work:
There's already a 11.0 version, but it's pure MeeGo. It needs to be adapted to use the Harmattan keyboard/input manager and the media framework of Harmattan, at the very least. Because of this, Opera Mobile can't appear on the Ovi Store but can be installed manually.
If you can live with a worse keyboard, no autocorrection, and no Youtube or HTML5 videos, you can use this build right now as I do, and get Opera Link, Speed Dial and Opera Turbo on the N9.
But if they're going to adapt, please adapt Opera 11.5 Labs, which is only compiled for Intel and needs a separate build for ARM to be used in the N9. The fact that this more recent build, released in November (when the N9 was already a certainty and the N950 devkits were at developers for 3 months) was not compiled to ARM at all is what's very disappointing for me. Remember, MeeGo Harmattan is fully MeeGo 1.2 compatible and a recompile and a couple of weeks of bugfixing would get the job done, with the same issues as in the current 11.0 build.
I say we start a petition. Maybe some publicity on MyNokiaBlog and My-Meego.com will help us. Since Opera is not open-source, we can't take the matter in our own hands.
[edit]
Of course, Tizen can come to our rescue:
(Source: theverge.com)In an interview at CES 2012 this week, Samsung's Tae-Jin Kang has revealed his company's intention to fold bada OS into the Intel-backed Tizen open source OS project. Bada is, or was, Samsung's homebrew effort at developing its own operating system, an effort that we were dubious about from the start. After failing to find much traction with its Wave handsets, Samsung is now wisely deciding to abandon hope of going it alone in the cutthroat mobile OS realm and is joining up with a development project that offers an opportunity for collaboration with others.
That's not to say that Tizen has much better prospects that bada would've had on its own. Tizen is the new badge placed upon MeeGo, the formerly promising Linux-based OS that Intel and Nokia were going to rock our world with until Nokia decided Windows Phone offered a better shot at success. In truth, this is a coming together of two outsider projects that need to consolidate their powers if they're to stand any chance.
Samsung promises backwards compatibility with current bada apps in its future integrated software product, as well as continued support for apps written using the bada SDK. "At least one to two" Tizen-powered Samsung phones will come out this year, according to Forbes' quote of Tae-Jin Kang, though it appears the open source OS will figure in the lower portion of the company's portfolio. The true high end will remain dedicated to Android and Windows Phone for the foreseeable future.
See, Opera? Everybody that touches LiMo or the Linux Foundation ends up dead. LiMo has never produced any phone of note and has gobbled up Maemo, Moblin, and now Bada. Meanwhile, Intel is going gangbusters on Android for x86, and has no foreseeable use for MeeGo/Tizen - no word on IVI, embedded and tablet markets, the Bada merging is for handsets.
So, Tizen will support (at least) Bada API, MeeGo API (frozen at 1.3 and deprecated), HTML5 API, probably a community port of WebOS API, WAC API. All these APIs and they expect it to have any kind of battery life?
LiMo, MeeGo, Tizen, it's a bad joke. Nokia should have NEVER gotten into MeeGo, it lost two years, we could be going on Maemo7 by now and instead several million dollars of development of Maemo/MeeGo were declared "not enough/ dead on arrival" by Nokia's CEO. Thankfully, we got ourselves an N9 out of it. It's the Linux Phone (tm) done right.
Get to it, Opera.
A good example for that is ebuddy XMS. Since there is no Whatsapp available for the N9, the run on XMS is pretty big (even though the available version is only beta). Ebuddy kinda has a monopole situation on the N9 and many of it's users try to make other people use that application too - and since ebuddy has superior functions towards its big competitor it has the chances to win new users.
The same for Opera - when I used the iPhone I showed to many people Opera Mobile. Barely anyone of them would have tried it out by themselves, but onces showed, most of the people liked it a lot.
And next to that, I don't think it would be such a big thing to bring Opera to the N9. The unofficial ported version works already very well. The only things I miss is portrait mode, Opera Link and the build-in N9 keyboard (of course there's more missing).
Now Opera would easily have the possibility to become the unofficial-main browser of the N9, but somehow Opera doesn't see that. I feel Opera always has been there, on any phone, on any computer I used - and now I'm left with a huge disappointment. Although I've to say things also work great without Opera, but it would be an amazing option.
Bumping this tread up!
The N9 community needs a complete browser, preferably with flash support.
Come on Opera!
@oeloemo
There will not be loyalty to those that cannot deliver.
This will be a race between Opera and Mozilla, the one who delivers first browser with flash support will be the preferred browser for me.
Originally posted by iolinux333:
I am looking for a replacement phone and love the N9 and I was checking to see if there was Opera for it. Oh well, I guess not, so I guess I have to buy another Android phone. I hate Android, but there's really no good alternative at this time, oh well. I would have bought the N9 if there was Opera.
So you re saying no to an N9 just because Opera is missing? I think thats a big mistake especially if you already don't like Android. There is an unofficially ported version of Opera Mobile available for the N9. It's not perfect, but I'm using it quiet a lot. At least it's f.e much better than the official iPad version which is not usable. Check out this link: http://my-meego.com/software/applications.php?fldAuto=59&faq=9
Plus the native N9 browser is pretty good. It's kept simple but it's fast and displays websides very well. With the new N9 update (P.R 1.2 - already available to developers) the native browser will finally get some important and necessary functions - which I think were missing. The N9 also has an amazing feed-reader which is so well integrated into the system, which makes me use any browser less than before.
There's even the possibility to make Opera (as mentioned on top) to your standard browser (with a terminal code).
So with the N9 you won't be that left out at all - I don't want to make any advertisment for this phone, but I would rather say no to a fully functional Opera browser than a phone I don't like. So maybe you look again into it and rethink your decision
Good luckSo how's that for having good APIs! It's a MeeGo app for tablets, repackaged from RPM to DEB, on a PHONE that isn't MeeGo at all, and apart from a couple of integration bugs, it works better than the native browser!
22. February 2012, 15:28:54 (edited)
Showing topic replies 1 - 50 of 72.