Search results for: “label/browsers”

  • New Release: Opera 16 Browser Has Been Launched

    New Release: Opera 16 Browser Has Been Launched

    The biggest news today is probably the introduction of shared photo album in Facebook. But opera has yet another thing to say in the technology world.

    Today, Opera Software ASA has released a new version of Opera browser just a few months after they released version 15.

    Opera 16 has better performance and improved support for HTML5 than any previous version of the opera browser. This release is also based on Chromium 29.

    Opera twitter update on the 23/08/2013

    The new release will introduce some interesting features such as:

    Feature of Opera 16 Browser

    • Jump List for Windows: Jump lists are now supported on Windows. Jump lists allow quicker navigation from the task bar, like getting an overview of your Speed Dial. 
    • Support for W3R Geolocation API: The geolocation API lets you share your location with trusted websites. When you visit a location-aware website, like foursquare, the browser will ask you to share your location. If you accept, Opera can tell the website where you are located.
    • Presentation Mode fo MAC: Browse the web with presentation mode to get a full-screen experience. Quick tip: you can go straight to presentation mode by pressing shift+CMD+F
    • Form Filler: Save time with the form filler. Simply input your information in the settings and then use to it to auto-fill forms on the web. 

    In  a browser reliability test last week, Mozilla Firefox 23 was flawless. What do you think of the new opera release? You can share your views in the comment section

    Download Opera Browser

    The latest opera release can be downloaded from their official website.   Download Opera 16 for Windows
    Download Opera 16 for Mac

  • Mozilla Firefox 23 Proved Flawless as IE Woes Continue

    Mozilla Firefox 23 Proved Flawless as IE Woes Continue

    In  a browser reliability test, the recent versions of Google’s Chrome and Mozilla’s Firefox are measurably less prone to crashes and errors than Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 10, a new analysis by applications testing firm Sauce Labs has found.

    If this looks like another stick to beat Microsoft’s browser with, it is worth pointing out that the firm’s study of around 55 million tests run using the Selenium platform found that all browsers showed extremely low levels of errors, in the order of 0.12 percent or lower for the “worst” performer, Apple’s Safari 6.

    On the same scale, Opera 12 scored 0.08 percent, IE10 at 0.05 percent, Chrome 27 under 0.02 percent, with Firefox was so low it effectively achieved a remarkable zero, that is to say no errors at all. IE lagged its main rivals but at levels that were already extremely low.

    As interesting as the reliability figures was the level of improvement shown by these recent versions, some only months or even weeks old.

    Internet Explorer 6 (released in 2001 with XP) and 7 (2007) had previously been the worst performers on 0.3 percent each, behind Firefox on Opera 10 (2009) and Firefox 7 (2011) and IE8 (2009) on just under 0.25 percent. It is remarkable that all of these are still used by small percentages of global browser users, but they are also aging software vulnerable to issues more serious than how often they might crash.

    “Half of the browser versions we analyzed had error rates lower than 0.07 percent. That’s pretty low, and suggests that browsers are getting more reliable as more versions come out,” said Luren Nguyen of Sauce Labs.

    Despite lagging slightly, IE had also shown major improvement over time.

    “Microsoft has really been pushing their new version of Internet Explorer as the most modern and high-performing version of IE. You’ve may have seen their nostalgia-tinged IE 10 commercial. The data we have on browser error rates suggests that their claims may have quite a bit of merit,” she said.

    The absolute level of errors in these tests is an imperfect way to measure browser reliability some might argue (can the errors be proved to be the browser’s fault and not the testing suite’s?), but the comparative measurement won’t be coincidence. Errors, which usually result in a crash of some kind, are caused by bugs in the browser code.

    Do error rates really matter? Only when they occur, which seems to be rarely these days.Credit: pcword.com