Opera: Difference between revisions
(Updating to latest "Opera OLPC" version) |
m (corrected external links to be so) |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
Opera has made a special [http://my.opera.com/desktopteam/blog/show.dml/704304 Opera OLPC Edition] package. Packages are available [http://snapshot.opera.com/unix/olpc-544/ here]. |
Opera has made a special [http://my.opera.com/desktopteam/blog/show.dml/704304 Opera OLPC Edition] package. Packages are available [http://snapshot.opera.com/unix/olpc-544/ here]. |
||
== Installing Opera == |
== Installing Opera == |
||
Installing Opera on test machines is easy. From a shell, run these commands as root: |
Installing Opera on test machines is easy. From a shell, run these commands as root: |
||
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
==Installing Flash in Opera== |
==Installing Flash in Opera== |
||
* Download the flash plugin rpm file from |
* Download the flash plugin rpm file from http://www.adobe.com and install it: ''rpm -vi flash-plugin.XXXXX.rpm'' |
||
==Installing Java in Opera== |
==Installing Java in Opera== |
||
* Download the JRE from |
* Download the JRE from http://java.sun.com and install it |
||
* Then you need to create a symbolic link in opera plugin directory |
* Then you need to create a symbolic link in opera plugin directory |
||
** ''cd /usr/lib/opera/plugins'' |
** ''cd /usr/lib/opera/plugins'' |
Revision as of 17:33, 23 January 2007
Opera OLPC Edition
Opera has made a special Opera OLPC Edition package. Packages are available here.
Installing Opera
Installing Opera on test machines is easy. From a shell, run these commands as root:
wget http://snapshot.opera.com/unix/olpc-544/opera-9.12-20070122.10-static-qt.i386-en.rpm rpm -vi opera-9.10-20061214.1-static-qt.i386-en.rpm
This installs the OLPC Edition, a snapshot of version 9.12. To learn about the most recent builds of Opera, check the Opera desktop blog and select the statically linked rpm packages for Unix/intel-linux.
If you are having trouble with rpm, just grab a tarball
wget http://snapshot.opera.com/unix/olpc-544/opera-9.12-20070122.10-static-qt.i386-en-544.tar.bz2 tar xvf opera-9.12-20070122.10-static-qt.i386-en-544.tar.bz2 cd opera-9.12-20070122.10-static-qt.i386-en-544 sudo ./install.sh
Opera is more than a secure web browser, it's also an RSS and Atom feed reader, bittorrent client, email client, and IRC client.
Opera offers keyboard shortcuts that may come handy:
- q/a navigates up/down in links
- w/s navigates up/down in headings
- 9/0 zooms page out/in
Executing Opera inside X-Windows (Sugar):
- Shell outside X (ctrl+alt+F1, ctrl+alt+F2, ...):
- As root, set an environment variable:
- export DISPLAY=127.0.0.1:0.0
- Execute the opera with the user olpc:
- su olpc -c "opera &"
- As root, set an environment variable:
- Throught a shell in X (alt+=):
- just type opera from the shell
Installing Flash in Opera
- Download the flash plugin rpm file from http://www.adobe.com and install it: rpm -vi flash-plugin.XXXXX.rpm
Installing Java in Opera
- Download the JRE from http://java.sun.com and install it
- Then you need to create a symbolic link in opera plugin directory
- cd /usr/lib/opera/plugins
- ln -s /path/to/javajre/lib/i386
Known problems
- Running certain scripts inside Opera causes the machine to freeze. To avoid this, you can turn off JavaScript in the (quick) preferences (keybinding F12). Here is a minimal test case that exposes the problem:
<script type="text/javascript"> var d = new Date() d.getMilliseconds() document.write(d) </script>
The static version is compiled with gcc 2.95 (check opera --full-version). The Opera OLPC Edition build, made with gcc 4.1, is not affected by this.
Fullscreen isn't quite fullscreen, there's a gray bar at the bottom- works fine when running without menubar.- Widgets are not yet usable
- Opera is not integrated into the Sugar UI
- Due to the high pixel density, one "px" should probably be mapped to two pixels. Opera currently does not do this. It helps to set opera:config#UserPrefs|ForceDPI to 200 and restart Opera, this will change fonts in the UI that are not previously set explicitly, as well as fonts in websites that are set with points.