Opera just announced the release of Opera 10.10. This latest version of Opera's desktop browser now includes Opera Unite, the company's browser-based web server. With Unite, users can share photos, music, notes, websites, forums and calendars - but unlike standard web apps, these apps are hosted on the user's computer. When Opera first talked about Unite, it claimed that this service would "reinvent the web." This resulted in a lot of hype before the announcement and the inevitable backlash right afterward. When we tested the first alpha version of Opera with the built-in Unite feature, however, we came away quite impressed.
As usual, this latest version of Opera is available for a wide variety of operating systems, including Windows, OSX, FreeBSD, Solaris and Linux.
Opera Unite allows you to easily turn your desktop into a web server and run a number of web services like photo-sharing, file-sharing, a web server, and an online media player right from your machine and access all of these services from anywhere. While this gives you control over your media, it also means that your data is only available online as long as your computer is running.
Starting a Unite server takes seconds (though you need an Opera account to make this work). Opera will assign an address to your computer based on your username. Users can choose if they want to protect their applications with passwords or if they want to make them available to anybody on the net.
Besides Opera Unite, this latest version doesn't sport any major new features. With features like Opera Turbo, bookmark syncing, and the sleek new visual tabs design that Opera introduced in the last update, Opera 10 does have a lot of things going for it. In our tests this morning, the browser was stable and fast. Even though we didn't run any benchmarks, Opera 10 felt just as fast as any other modern browser.
For more information about Opera Unite, also have a look at our more in-depth review of the service and the apps that Opera includes by default.
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Opera the best browser. before that I used firefox but now I will only use Opera - I think Opera is safer
Opera is safer than Firefox according to various tests.
@Editor
The Opera Software logo on this page at the top is the old version. Anyway, thank you for supporting Opera and I hoe you like it.
I find opera boring because of it's dead fish type of looks compared to glossy looks of chrome.
@nishu
reading that comment convinces me that you either haven't ever tried to use opera or at least not opera 10.
otherwise you would know that opera changed their basic design (with the help of john hicks) :-)
also you can change skins and colors easily and replace the basic skin with a lot of others you find online. (http://my.opera.com/community/customize/skins/)
@chrome
tested once (like apple safari on win) and failed. because it's just inflexible. no mouse gestures, not the (quick) preferences i like to be able to change, no opera link, no fit to width, block content, individual site preferences etc.
but anyway. the good thing is that everyone is free to choose and that there is not only IE or safari but also opera, FF and a lot of small/adopted ones.