Vivaldi does this as well which is its implementations only saving grace that actually makes it usable, they just need to improve the design of the tab groups in the tab bar which is just terrible and pales to old Opera's collapsible design.Īnd while workspaces is indeed a very useful feature you cannot argue that tab stacking like this wouldn't also be very useful in its own right, both can easily co-exist and work together to complement the user experience in different ways. Opera's old implementation was also quite a bit different from Vivaldi's using a collapsible design to show only the active tab with a small arrow button next to it to expand the rest of the group, have a look at this image below I just took using Opera 12.18 for what it looked like with tabs in both horizontal and vertical positions (something Opera is still sorely missing and a killer feature for me) -Īlso if you enable popup thumbnails when hovering over a tab you could quickly & easily view all the tabs in the group and switch between them by clicking their thumbnail without having to expand the stack. It's really not about copying their features, it's about implementing useful features to enhance the browser (and something Opera once had). Vivaldi are far from the first to have tab stacking/grouping though, hell Opera had it themselves back in version 11.0. But one has to have the deep need to use Opera with all it offers (as it is now), not turning to another wishful thinking list and trying to change Opera into Vivaldi Bis. Workspaces are far more visionary and efficient than the ungainly Vivaldi's Stack. Stacking in Vivaldi is the least productive option I've met for many years. Use the damn Vivaldi if you so much cherish and like, not paying real attention to the Workspaces solution. Why people do like to copy Vivaldi solutions here I do not understand. Sevic last edited said in Can Opera browser desktop add options for tab hibernation and tab grouping for heavy users in-built?: Opera should also have done it apart from the default adblocker and VPN both of which doesn't do the job as promoted. Firefox has created many extensions to support users by themselves. And those that exist are outdated, not updated, or lose all the tabs. The saddest part is that there is no such addon in opera store that does give control to users about tab suspension or hibernation without closing them and letting them keep it the way they were before the closing of the browser. Opera team doesn't understand it, old users. I have to take the help of firefox which does provide some sense of support to power users and even google understood it through chrome tab grouping. I requested something you didn't understand maybe you arent using opera as much as I am across on any platform for work. I tried it many times but avoided it ever since.Īnd for "And Chromium discards tabs that are kept in the background for some time." I don't understand why you are focused on Chromium when I am using opera which has its own mechanism and structure different from chrome, or brave, or even Vivaldi. Neither it is like a tab container like firefox where each session is different and isn't in relation to any other nor it is a session manager as it overlaps and mixes everything. ROCKKER-55 last edited by said in Can Opera browser desktop add options for tab hibernation and tab grouping for heavy users in-built?:
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