April 24, 2008 10:47 AM PDT

Opera 9.5 Beta 2 adds neat URL look-up

Opera 9.5 Beta 2 now available

If you can't remember the URL of a site you've once visited, what do you do? You can either scour your history, willing the evasive address to remain listed, or you can search in Google by the keywords you remember and hope the site you want floats near the top of the results.

The latest version of Opera Software's 9.5 Beta browser, released Thursday for Windows, Mac, and Linux, makes fishing for past Web addresses much easier with a new feature called Quick Find.

Can't remember a URL? The Quick Find feature pulls up suggestions based on keyword.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Quick Find essentially bundles the keyword search directly into the Opera browser's address field. Typing in a few keywords produces a list of URLs from your past. Simply clicking the selection opens the Web page. I tested it out, and so far it works as advertised--as a fast, useful time-saver that gives your brain license to forget specific URLs.

Those familiar with Opera Mini will recognize Quick Find as the sister to the "find in page" feature in Opera Mini 4.1.

There are other updates to the beta build, but Quick Find remains the only new feature that users will engage with directly. The official Opera announcement also unveils faster e-mail rendering for its built-in client, support for EV (extended validation) SSL certificates, and more complete antiphishing protection thanks to collaboration with PhishTank and NetCraft's databases.

Then there's the unofficial announcement, leaked by Huib Kleinhout, Opera's desktop team manager, on Opera's blog. Through Opera Link, users will soon be able to synchronize notes in real time between Opera browsers for desktops, mobile phones, and devices.

That feature is in development, an Opera representative contact confirmed, and has not been released in this morning's build. For now, Opera Link behaves as it has been, populating each Opera browser you use (desktop, cell phone, Wii) with bookmarks added from any other.


Add a Comment (Log in or register) 25 comments (Page 1 of 2)
by JoyceNgo April 24, 2008 12:05 PM PDT
It just gets better and better every time. Opera is always making fast and noticeable improvements.
Reply to this comment
by yhwhan April 24, 2008 3:35 PM PDT
"Then there's the unofficial announcement..." On the contrary this (ahem) unofficial announcement is, in fact, in the second sentence of the pertinent blog post on Opera Desktop Team's offical blog, the first sentence simply being "Opera Kestrel 9.5 Beta 2 is available now!", so it barely even counts. The second sentence then begins "Beta 2 introduces Notes syncing support using Opera Link..." Read the full post at http://my.opera.com/desktopteam/blog/
Reply to this comment
by nourhummer April 24, 2008 11:51 PM PDT
gooooooooooooooooooood
Reply to this comment
by Len4a April 25, 2008 2:23 AM PDT
I luv Opera! The guys are great.
Reply to this comment
by abhisat April 25, 2008 5:24 AM PDT
What's a big deal about this? Firefox 3 already has this feature. FF3's address bar is the best I have ever seen.
Reply to this comment View reply
by bilditup1 April 25, 2008 5:27 AM PDT
Why is this news? This has been a feature of Firefox 3 beta for several months now. Based on the screenshot above, the Firefox implementation is also more 'eye-catching' - the word being searched for is bolded and made a text size larger. Give credit where credit is due.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
by Bansalgagan April 25, 2008 5:41 AM PDT
Thanks
Reply to this comment
by bkboza April 25, 2008 5:58 AM PDT
goooooooooooooooooooooooooood
Reply to this comment
by Osiris78 April 25, 2008 6:23 AM PDT
bilditup1: This is different from what Firefox 3 does. They highlight title and url, Opera highlights titles urls and text from the pages. It means you get alot more information. From opera.com: "Quick Find Forgotten the site where you found that perfect gift or idyllic vacation spot? Not to worry, Opera remembers all the text on a page you?ve visited. All you have to do is enter a few words you remember in the address bar and Opera will find the pages with that text. In the newest beta, you can also use Quick Find from your history tab, available under Tools > History."
Reply to this comment
by thinkl April 25, 2008 6:28 AM PDT
Firefox implementation is much simpler than Quick Find in Opera, which search the actual content of the pages you visit. Test it out and see the difference.
Reply to this comment
1 | 2 | Next 10 Comments >>
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
Add this to your feed reader
RSS feed
Add to Google
Add to Yahoo
Add to MSN
Add to Bloglines
Add to Newsgator
Recent posts
Featured Freeware: Trillian
Power Downloader restores Mozilla applications
First Look video: VLC media player
First Look video: dBpoweramp Music Converter
First Look video: Foxit PDF Reader
Download bloggers
Peter Butler
Jessica Dolcourt
Jason Parker
Seth Rosenblatt
Mark Sikes
About the Download Blog

Download.com editors cover the world of downloadable software and beyond.

On BNET: IE users envy Firefox no more
Visit other CNET Networks sites: