Opera has announced the official launch of Opera One’s early access program. Opera One will eventually replace the company’s current desktop browser for Windows, macOS, and Linux. The new browser features a liquid navigation and modular design philosophy made possible by a new architecture by Opera’s Multithreaded Compositor. Opera One is the first among the major Chromium-based browsers to introduce this new technology.
Multithreaded Compositor’s quicker and smoother user interface layer makes High-performance graphics operations possible, which eliminates interruptions from other processes. The new architecture enables Opera One to add innovative new features that set it apart from other Chromium-based browsers, in addition to Modular Design. The feature that cleverly combines tabs is Tab Islands, which is the most noticeable of these.
Opera One’s Tab Islands automatically organize tabs into their own tab island. For instance, the browser will put these tabs on their tab island if a user searches for a restaurant and opens many tabs to check out various locations. Additionally, the functionality will be able to comprehend how a user works and organize various Google Docs or other tabs required for work in a separate tab island.
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With distinctive colors and distinguishable island borders, each tab island in Opera One is simple to identify. By employing a straightforward drag-and-drop motion, users may add any tab to an existing tab island or create custom tab islands. Users of the browser may quickly discern the subjects on which they were concentrating and switch between them.
Opera One is now available to download, and the firm intends to make swift changes to the user interface to make it even more user-friendly. After the normal edition of Opera last month included new AI prompts and sidebar access to ChatGPT, the browser will also bring new generative AI features.