Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Features

The new version of Opera made me want to ditch Chrome for good

Add as a preferred source on Google

The browser wars are heating up again, with Microsoft putting the focus on its new AI capabilities in Edge. But one of the underdogs out there, Opera, has released a brand new version of its browser that make it a serious competitor.

This is Opera One

Whether it’s the innovative AI features or the redesigned tabs, this new Opera One browser has a lot going for it. It’s still in an early access developer version, but it certainly made me want to ditch Chrome for good.

Recommended Videos

Modular design

The Opera One browser early access developer version is now available.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It all starts with the modular nature of Opera One. The modular design is a fascinating concept, allowing everything to have its own place and out of the way of other features.

Even the sidebar ellipses being located at the bottom left corner feels like a bit more obvious placement than most browsers, where the icon can be crowded among others.

Many icons are large and easy to spot. Next to the address bar are several Opera functionality icons, including bookmarks, extensions, and logging into your Opera account. To the left are quick links for programs including ChatGPT, ChatSonic, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, and TikTok.

The lower left icons include a media player, another bookmarks icon, a history icon, and the sidebar setup, which is a more detailed version of what is on the main browser.

The browser downloads in night mode, which comes standard and should be a plus for many tech enthusiasts.

Workspaces

On the upper left are the Workspace icons, which work as part of Opera’s modular function. Workspace 1, the first icon serves as the primary browser for any session. Subsequent Workspaces have icons below the first and can serve different purposes at your discretion. Say you want a Workspace for research, one for social media, and one for general browsing.

You can set up three Workspaces and you can click the icons to access the Workspaces from which you want to browse. You can also right-click to edit the names and icons of the Workspaces to your preference.

Workspaces on the Opera One browser.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Switching between Workspaces goes smoothly like moving a piece of paper in a file. If you want to close the browser you will get a notification that will warn you that have tabs open that you’ll lose if you end your session if you’re not in the Workspace where those tabs are live.

Tab islands

Tab Island is an interesting function that allows you to organize multiple tabs from the same webpage into one group. Opera claims it is the first major Chromium-based browser to feature a “multithreaded compositor.” It took me a moment to actually figure out the context of the functionality but once I did, it made sense.

Originally, I thought it grouped different websites together by type, such as if you had Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest open as social media apps they would be grouped together, but that isn’t the function.

Tab Islands on the Opera One browser.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Say you’re on a website like Pinterest and you have several web pages open, Opera will automatically identify this and put a colored tab on the primary page. You can click the tab and the rest will accordian in, conserving space in your tabs area. Click the colored area again and webpages will spring apart, allowing you to access the individual tabs. Pressing CTRL or Command while clicking the colored tab slides the tabs all the way to where only the colored tab shows, saving even more space. Notably, if you add a new tab to a contracted section, the tabs will expand again.

In comparison, I have 21 open tabs on my Microsoft Edge browser and no way to organize them. Edge does have its own grouping feature; however, it’s not as intuitive as Opera’s.

AI features

The early access developer features included on the new Opera browser include an easy login feature for several AI apps including ChatGPT and ChatSonic, as well as platforms that benefit from AI, such as Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, and TikTok.

AI features one the Opera One browser.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Rather than having the AI fully integrated into the Opera browser like Microsoft Bing Search, the login works like an auxiliary browser similar to the MacGPT app that was developed specifically for macOS. You can click the ChatGPT icon and log in with your credentials, then interact with associated AI features. There’s an AI prompts tab located next to the address bar that offers suggestions for queries you can input into ChatGPT depending on what website you’re using.

Clicking one will bring up ChatGPT, which will then generate an answer to that prompt. It’s meant to be a guide for queries you will use in the chatbot, but you can input whatever prompts you like. The generated results include a copy button that you can utilize to transfer the content to a different app, such as a social media app if you are requesting that ChatGPT assist you in generating a post.

More updates to come

All that is pretty exciting, and it made me want to make the official switch once the final version comes out.

To try it out for yourself, you can download the Opera One early access developer version at the Opera One landing page. The browser is currently available for both Windows and macOS and will be compatible with Linux later this year.

With being the early access developer version Opera says users can expect more updates, in which the browser will become more modular and intuitively functional.

Fionna Agomuoh
Fionna Agomuoh is a Computing Writer at Digital Trends. She covers a range of topics in the computing space, including…
Topics
The hidden labor of modern tech support is turning us all into unpaid employees
Every chatbot loop, forum search, and repeated explanation adds up to a hidden tax on your time.
Bicycle, Cycling, Person

I recently tried to cancel an order from a popular food delivery app and somehow ended up playing a tiny, miserable escape room inside a chatbot. I couldn’t type my actual issue. I could only tap preset options, none of which matched what I needed. So I kept backing out and trying again, like the right answer was hiding behind one more bad menu choice.

Eventually, I Googled how to talk to a live person like an idiot who couldn’t solve a basic task. The answer, naturally, was to pretend I had a different request. I’m kidding, though. I know customers like myself aren’t exactly idiots. But the experience sure made me feel like one.

Read more
Gemini could soon offer a troubleshooting mode and save you a trip to help manuals
Gemini's new Troubleshooting mode offers step-by-step fixes using text responses and interactive widgets
google-gemini

Google may have just accidentally shown everyone where Gemini is headed next. According to TestingCatalog, a new Troubleshooting mode has quietly appeared inside the Gemini model picker menu for some users.

It sits alongside existing options like Gemini 3.5 Flash and 3.1 Pro, which are the standard AI models you already switch between in the app.

Read more
Apple could offer MacBook Ultra in two sizes with one-of-a-kind OLED display
A new report reveals the MacBook Ultra's display size, OLED tech, and launch window
macbook-ultra-sizes

Apple's rumored MacBook Ultra is shaping up to be one of the most significant Mac redesigns in years, and a fresh industry report suggests it could land sooner than anyone expected. Research firm Omdia has released a new study on OLED adoption in laptops, and buried inside it are some very specific details about Apple's next MacBook.

What screen sizes will the MacBook Ultra come in?

Read more