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Opera

Opera Browser Raises $115 Million In Its Stock Market Debut (cnet.com) 53

An anonymous reader quotes CNET: Opera, an underdog in a browser market dominated by Google's Chrome, raised $115 million in an initial public offering Friday. The company sold 9.6 million American depositary shares at $12 each, the high end of the $10-to-$12 range it expected for the IPO. When the stock started trading more broadly at about 7:30 a.m. PT, it rose as high as 28 percent above that before settling in at a 10 percent rise, to $13.24, during midday trading.... In fact, Opera raised a big notch more, because at the same time as the IPO, it also secured a $60 million private funding round from Tospring Technology, also known as Bitmain, which makes Bitcoin mining computers, IDG Capital Fund and IDG Capital Investors. And the financial firms underwriting the IPO had an option to release another 15 percent of shares -- 1.44 million. "It gets us roughly up to $190 million," Chief Financial Officer Frode Jacobsen said....

In the first three months of 2018, Opera reported net income of $6.6 million on revenue of $39.4 million. The company makes money through partnerships with search engines, including Google and Yandex, that pay for search traffic it sends their way and through advertising deals like promoting websites on the browser's bookmarking, or speed dial, page. Opera has 264 million monthly active users on smartphones and 57 million on personal computers, Opera said in regulatory filings. Starting in 2017, it built an AI-powered news service into its browser and now offers it as a standalone app called Opera News. That has 90 million monthly users. The news app and service has been responsible for the turnaround in Opera's recent financial fortunes, Jacobsen said.

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Opera Browser Raises $115 Million In Its Stock Market Debut

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  • ...it's sure to be only a matter of time before the product goes down the drain...

    • I wasn't aware that it had left the drain. This is more of a question of whether it leaves the p-trap and gets back into the drain.

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Saturday July 28, 2018 @02:14PM (#57024074)

      ...it's sure to be only a matter of time before the product goes down the drain...

      Really? You had the golden opportunity here for an opera pun, and you didn't take it.

      ...it's sure to be only a matter of time before the fat lady has sung for this product

      ...the curtain will fall for Opera soon, the way things are going.

      ...will this be Opera's swan song?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    See, there's NOTHING like it anywhere else!! There are no competitors in its class.

    None!

    And those people KNOW how to get things done!

    I just see this stock going $100, $200 maybe $300/share!!

    And the growth is unlimited!! I see them branching out into other software and maybe commercial space travel! Where else are there going to be browsers in space but Opera.

    And the name recognition!!! Opera

    I mean it just brings one's thoughts to .... boredom.

    Never mind.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 28, 2018 @01:54PM (#57024022)

    opera is not a norweigan company anymore. they may still have an office there, but opera software and the browser is 95% chinese-owned. their owners have a shady reputation, at best... and that's on top of their government also having a piece of the action.

    • Frankly, I'd rather have it be the government that does not have the ability to imprison me.
      Yes, in China, I'd use US software. And in the US, Chinese.

      • Frankly, I'd rather have it be the government that does not have the ability to imprison me.
        Yes, in China, I'd use US software. And in the US, Chinese.

        And then China sells data to the US and the US sells data to China and you wind up imprisoned anyway. You may or may not have noticed this, but China is our #1 trading partner...

  • I used to use Opera, many years ago. I really liked having the tabs on the bottom, among other things. Then they abandoned their engine and switched to the Chrome engine. No more tabs on the bottom - so I switched to Chrome.
  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Saturday July 28, 2018 @02:12PM (#57024060)
    We need a fourth browser engine outside of webkit/blink, gecko and edge. Use your money to put Presto back into prime time and reduce dependence on Google.
  • Will it run on Amiga? I here they have another model coming soon . . .

    [ducks]

    hawk

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's based on Chromium, and contrary to what's been posted above, is in active development and contributes back to the chromium project.

    It's got a built-in VPN that's limited because they sold off their original VPN (SurfEasy) to Symantec and its server selection is sparse (Unfortunately if you wish to post messages to Slashdot through the Opera VPN, you can't because Slashdot owners are complete cunts and prohibit it. However, I can go through some shady web proxy site, let my computer become a part of a

  • or is it legit for a change?

  • I'm browsing with... *counts* ... 97 open tabs; seven different tab groups; seven pinned tabs; a handful of tabs which are hibernated and I can add another new tab with no noticeable slowdown or hitch. I've been running this 24/7 for several weeks straight with zero instability nor memory leaks and/or crashes.

    This is the new monarch of browsers... Vivaldi.

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