
Whatever the web browsers of the future might look like, Opera Neon is certainly anticipating a very different look than the standard Chromium-based design. Once you have enough “bubbles” on the start page, they will drift below the screen and enable a vertical scrolling bar that you will need to access them. However, there is a purpose to this design: Neon includes a “gravity” algorithm that lifts your frequently used tabs and web pages toward the top while letting everything else sink down, like bubbles rising to the water’s surface. We like the convenience and graphics-oriented nature of the start page, but the scattered arrangement of the site buttons is a little disorienting. You can customize the start page by adding your own icons to the mix by dragging and dropping an open tab onto the “desktop.” These default web pages and tabs are displayed as circular images that can be visually identified, much like desktop icons. The start page is meant to resemble a desktop with icons, and even uses your computer’s desktop wallpaper.


Time Machine vs Arq vs Duplicati vs Cloudberry Backup.
