In my previous post, I talked about why I was fed up with Firefox and why I didn't really like IE. Now, let's look at Opera specifically.
First, it comes with integrated email and feed support. You can say that IE also does in that Windows comes with a mail client. Also, Firefox does have it's companion Thunderbird. However, neither of those solutions provides the experience that Opera does.
Email is email, but I don't really like webmail. I find it rather painful, to be honest. It does not give me the view of my mail that I would like (i.e. all my mail accounts with all my feeds in a single messaging application). One of the reasons I stumbled across Opera is that I was getting tired of Thunderbird's unstable feed support (feeds will occasionally stop updating until the application is restarted). The one thing that has bugged me about the email support is that I cannot seem to find a way to import my Thunderbird contacts. If anyone knows how, please let me know.
There are a few things I don't like. First, the filters are cool in that they can learn. However, they are annoying in that there seems to be no other foldering mechanism. I used to have a folder for my girlfriend, one of stuff to keep, and a few others for particular things that I do. Now, it just feels a bit weird. Maybe there's a little nuance that I'm missing.
Next is the feed support. I like the message-like feed support. I like to not have to sift through things I've already read, even if the new stuff is highlighted in a certain way. The feed support in Opera is much like Thunderbird in the way it is displayed. It has the added bonus of letting me see all feed messages in a single list. I like this because it relieves the monotony of sifting through all the random feeds (including several from failblog and the like) that I read one at a time. The best part of the news feed reader is that it is in my browser. I know this may not seem to be a breakthrough, but I can watch flash videos in the news feed entries. The pages that are brought up are fully functional. It's one of those strange and crazy things. Plus, my content blocking also works.
For the browser itself, everything just seems to work. There are a few places where I have to tell Opera to tell the site that I'm using Firefox, but otherwise, it just generally works. It takes a little time to get used to the way the pages are rendered, especially when there is only partial information. Opera tends to be a bit more brutal to pages that do not do the right thing. In general, though, it handles itself quite well. Interestingly, one of the biggest issues I have is with Yodlee's Moneycenter. I use this to manage my finances. When you enter your username, it takes you through a redirect to get to the page to enter your password. That redirect page writes invalid HTML (everything up to part of the body tag itself) and then seem to cut off. The meta tag with the redirect is there, but Opera will not follow it because the page is not complete. If I forcibly stop the page load, it will then read the meta tag and refresh me to the next page. It is really odd.
Finally, I want to say something about what the Internet should be. Over the years I've been on here, I have seen many things come and go. I have seen the rise, fall, and continuing persistence of AIM. I have seen game services and popular sites die. With all the dynamic web applications and cloud-based systems, all the cool sites that do basically useless things, there are consistently a few problems with life on the Internet.
To start this, I will ask when the last time you sent a large file to someone? How did you do it? I'm sure many people do it in different ways. Personally, I upload it to the server you are reading from right now. I send a link to whoever wants it, and they download it from there. The real question is how do you share resources without using an intermediary. AIM allowed file transfers. If you're really savvy, you can set up an FTP or HTTP server on your computer, make it accessible to the internet, and have a friend hit that. Opera Unite makes that easy. There are built-in file transfer, media, picture sharing, and web server functions. You can easily set up a web server to point someone to to look at your latest web development work. You can select a file and send it to someone without having to know how to host it somewhere. I have yet to use some of these features due to the fact that I have almost no friends who use Opera. They look like the dream, though. It's the dream of any easy, social, shareable Internet without sacrificing control over the content you own. There's even a way to share your music library across the web. This is particularly appealing to me. I'd love to share my music with myself when I'm on other computers.
The verdict isn't in yet. I'm not convinced I will stay here with Opera. Even if I don't, the fact remains that I would like a better email client and a better browser. The new versions of Firefox and IE scare me more than encourage me. Could Opera finally be making its own way in the world?