Web browsers are among the most essential pieces of software we use daily, yet we often take them for granted. Most users settle for whatever default ships with their devices -- and that's a mistake.
For the most part, I use a browser to research for work or consume media. With Opera AI, this has become more meaningful.
It's not free. Today, Opera has announced that it's opening up public access to Opera Neon, which is its experimental browser for AI power users, "who ...
ZDNET's key takeaways Opera's Neon AI browser was publicly released on Thursday.It comes with a hefty price tag, $19.90/month ...
Agentic AI browsers are beginning to transform how we use the web, moving from passive tools to autonomous digital assistants ...
Since AI works by collecting and learning from data, these tools might be gathering more of personal information than users ...
In the latest version of Opera Mini mobile browser for Android, users can, for the first time, switch between two different ...
AI agents have emerged from the lab, bringing promise and peril. A Carnegie Mellon University researcher explains what's ...
After closing on its Clayton property purchase, the Opera Theatre of St. Louis will spend several more seasons at Webster ...
Google Chrome maintains its market dominance despite the rise of AI-native browsers, highlighting user habits and ecosystem ...
The year 2025 marked a decisive shift in AI. Systems once confined to research labs and prototypes began to appear as ...
Experts warn that by 2026, these autonomous systems could become the primary vector for corporate security breaches, ...