

To start Opera browser beta, go to Activities > search for Opera beta or run the opera-beta command in the terminal. sudo tee /etc//opera.repo > search for Opera or running the opera command in the terminal. Then, add the Opera browser repository to the system. Add Opera Browser Repositoryįirst, import the Opera browser’s public signing key to your system with the rpm command.

In this post, we will see how to install Opera browser on Fedora 36 / Fedora 35. Opera has been around since 1995, and it was designed as an alternative to Internet Explorer, the most popular web browser at the time. It is available for Windows, macOS and Linux, and Android operating systems. Are you guys really modifying the code on the C/C++ side that much that this is out of the question? At least, announce that you're working on it or something.Opera is one of the most popular and widely used web browsers globally, developed by Opera Software AS. It's built on top of Chromium isn't it? Is there really Windows specific stuff that can't be ported over? I know cpu and memory are handled a little differently, but if you're working within the Chromium framework already and Chromium works on Linux (and most of the non-core OS stuff is going to be javascript anyway), I feel like it shouldn't be that hard since Chromium already runs on Linux. More software really needs to support Linux and I don't mean just Ubuntu, or RedHat either.Ĭome on Opera, make this happen. I, like the op, find it highly upsetting that Linux users are left out to test, help develop, and provide feedback on features for the browser. But I completely agree! I use Linux (Manjaro) at work as my primary OS, and I recently came across a news article referencing the buying of Yoyo games by Opera and Opera GX and so I played around with Opera GX a bit over the weekend and I really liked it. I hate to bump an older thread (but rather than create another thread for the same thing, I thought it would make sense to reply to this one.
