CyberNotes: Customizing Opera To Fit Your Needs

This article was written on July 05, 2006 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Web Browser Wednesday
 

If you have decided to give the new Opera 9 a shot then you might have been wondering how you can add more features to it. Opera isn’t exactly like Firefox where you can add extensions that other users have created in order to get the features that you want. It may sound like a downfall to Opera but it actually isn’t. While using Opera you will find that many of the extensions you sat there downloading in Firefox are implemented right out of the box. Pretty nice, huh?

Opera ButtonIf that isn’t enough for you then you can get bookmarklets/buttons that will make using Opera a little easier. Bookmarklets are snippets of JavaScript code that you can place on a toolbar to perform an action. There literally hundreds of these bookmarklets that people have come up with to help save you a little time. Here are some of the ones that I found to be useful:

Those are just a few of the bookmarklets that I use in Opera. You can really make your browsing experience quicker by looking through the lists of bookmarklets and finding tasks that you constantly perform. Here are three of the most useful sites that I found:

If those bookmarklets and buttons still aren’t enough then you will find this guide very useful for tweaking Opera. It has many tweaks and walks you through them step-by-step. They will soon show you how customizable Opera really is (especially if you haven’t gone to Opera:Config in your address bar).

Overall Opera is a great browser and the features that you receive are amazing. I would use it as by fulltime browser if they had complete compatibility with Google services, but I think Google is to blame for that one. The Opera Desktop Team is really dedicated to giving you the best experience possible, and it is only fair that you give them a shot. If you don’t want to install Opera then you can always get the portable version.

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Windows Vista 5456 Released With UAC Improvements

This article was written on June 24, 2006 by CyberNet.

Windows Vista 5456 Released With UAC Improvements

According to The Hive Windows Vista 5456.5 was released to MS Connect testers. We were expecting the release today after the Vista Newsgroups started to talk about about a potential release.

The best news is that this release has some UAC (User Account Control) improvements. Maybe we won’t see those messages that pop-up left and right just to delete a shortcut! Check back with The Hive later tonight because they are supposed to be posting screenshots.

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Yahoo Widget Engine 3.1 Released

This article was written on April 12, 2006 by CyberNet.

Yahoo Widget Engine 3.1 Released

The Yahoo Widget Engine, formerly known as Konfabulator, has now been updated to version 3.1. There is quite an extensive list of changes for both the Mac and Windows versions. From scrolling through the change list it appears that many of the changes are to help safeguard the user and beef up the security.

If you haven’t used the Yahoo Widget Engine before, then I am sure that you will find it quite impressive if you try it. It is a simple way to get a lot of information right on your desktop. From RSS feeds to your local weather (or even your local gas prices!). You have 2,400+ widgets that you can choose from and manipulate in various ways.

The one thing you need to remember is that every widget the you run takes up more RAM. So if you are on a computer that doesn’t have much RAM then the widgets can definitely make it a little sluggish. They recommend having 512MB of RAM but I would say 768MB would be a little more reasonable.

Download The Yahoo Widget Engine

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

Nintendo iPhone and Android games: maybe, maybe not

If there’s a way to clearly understand how Nintendo CEO Satoru Iwata feels on expanding their business into the mobile smartphone universe through Android and the iPhone, the tech publishing … Continue reading

Facebook Paper review: Zuckerberg finally “gets” mobile

Facebook and mobile haven’t had an easy run of it. Facebook Home, an attempt to capitalize on mobile with a near-walled-garden met with derision and faded with barely a whimper; … Continue reading

PlayStation 4 software update arrives tonight: here’s how your headphones start working

Tonight Sony is issuing PlayStation 4 software update tonight which will bring the operating system up to version 1.60 automatically. This update will be bringing on PlayStation 4 compatibility with … Continue reading

Twitter interface change today: reflecting mobile

Today you may have noticed a relatively large change to the way you’re experiencing Twitter on the web. This is because Twitter is pushing their newest user interface to the … Continue reading

PlayStation 4 February releases begin with horror

The first in a (relatively short) series of releases for PlayStation 4 this month will be the horror title “Outlast.” Spoken extremely highly of in its first release on the … Continue reading

Paper Stories from Facebook app launches for iOS

The Facebook-made app known as “Paper” has launched this morning after a brief preview last week. This app acts as a sort of alternate portal to the Facebook world, allowing … Continue reading

Windows Vista Ultimate not 1st Choice for Consumers

This article was written on February 09, 2007 by CyberNet.

Microsoft’s Windows Vista has been available to consumers now for 10 days. Results from the first five days of Vista sales are available with nothing really too surprising to reveal.

The first thing which the analysis report shows is that the sales of PC’s for the week ending February 3rd increased 173% which is certainly an impressive number. However, think about what that number could have been if Vista was launched before the holiday season.

It was all about Vista Home Premium for the first five days of sales.  Home Premium alone made up 70% of sales for  PCs with Vista.  This of course does not factor in that many computers come with Home Premium as the pre-installed version.  It is not know how many Home Premium sales came from upgrades.

Vista Home Basic, the simplest version that you can buy made up 22% of the sales, and Windows Vista Ultimate made up 1.2 percent of the sales. Microsoft is probably disappointed in the Ultimate number because this is obviously where they’re going to make the most profit.Samir Bhavnani who wrote the report says that “”You can expect over time that Ultimate will become a bigger part of the overall mix.”

Only time will tell how the sales of Vista Ultimate will play out.  One of the biggest factors that will keep people from upgrading to the Ultimate version is price.  When buying a computer with Vista Home Basic, you can upgrade to home-premium for just $50 more, but an upgrade to Vista Ultimate from Vista Basic would cost $150.  Consumers are going to be much more willing to spend an extra $50 versus $150.

Also included in the report was the percentage of sales from PC Vendors.  In the first week, Hewlett-Packard accounted for 54% of Vista Home premium sales and 53% of Vista Home Basic sales.

Clearly, Vista Ultimate is not a 1st choice for consumers. Home Premium appears to be the “go-to” version that will satisfy the needs of most people and comes in at a much more affordable price when compared to Vista Ultimate.

I’d be interested in knowing how many PC’s and copies of Vista were actually sold.  The percentages give you some perspective to how Vista is doing, but if there was an overall number that these percentages were derived from, it would be much more insightful. It would also be interesting to see how many people are going for the much more affordable OEM edition.

Source: InfoWorld

Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com