![]() For privacy and performance, I don't think you can beat Opera and its optional settings. I even like the customization options like 'show system color on top bar', which made it more Windows 10-like and the ability to set Bing as my default search engine. Between the extensions and those new features listed above, I see little reason to keep using Chrome, which was mostly out of habit and familiarity. I will say that I will be dropping Chrome for Opera even if for just the memory usage savings. Am I switching?Īfter using Opera for the last few weeks, the question arises if I will change from my weird Chrome/Edge usage. Overall, I was very impressed with it and thought it was a fantastic addition. Opera's VPN service, which is part of the developer version (Opera 39) will be hitting the main build of Opera in the next few weeks. The window even displays your current "virtual" IP address to let you know it is working and reveals how much data you have transferred. Users can set the virtual location to the US, Canada, Germany, or the Netherlands and you have unlimited VPN data. To enable, the user can just hop into a Private Browsing sessions (Ctrl-Shift-N) and tap the VPN icon in the browser bar window. Once again, Opera takes the thinking out of using VPN by building it into the browser (opens in new tab).
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