Following a period of limited waitlist access, Opera Neon, the company’s subscription-based AI-powered browser, is now generally available. Here’s what it can do. A few months ago, Opera released Neon ...
This Thursday, Opera made Opera Neon, its experimental AI browser, available to the general public. Anyone can now subscribe for $19.90 per month without waiting on a list. Opera Neon is an agentic ...
Following a couple of months’ testing, Norway-based browser company Opera has finally made its AI-powered browser, Neon, available to the public — though you’ll have to shell out $19.90 per month to ...
Opera today opened access to its agentic Neon browser, allowing anyone to subscribe to the app for AI power users. Opera Neon has been available in a closed "Founders" phase since it launched on ...
Opera just rolled out early public access for its new AI-powered web browser, Neon, and it comes with a pretty hefty price tag for what is typically a free software application. The Norway-based web ...
Opera Neon is an agentic browser designed for AI power users. Unlike a standard web browser, Opera Neon uses AI agents to perform tasks and even code web apps rather than just display web pages. It ...
It’ll cost $19.90 a month, though. Subscribers get access to top AI models and agents meant to streamline web surfing. When we tried it in October, Neon didn’t live up to the hype, though neither did ...
The year of AI browsers is ending with Opera opening up its own version to everyone. First unveiled in May, Opera Neon has been available for testing via a waiting list since early October. Now, after ...
U.S. transportation stocks have been strong performers — but investors shouldn’t get too excited. The recent strength exhibited by the Dow Jones Transportation Average is not the bullish omen that ...
The U.S. stock market took off at the back half of the day, bolstered by banking and related financial stocks that soared in an apparent deregulatory push by Washington. The S&P 500 rose 0.2%, the Dow ...
The stock market dropped Monday, lead by declines in technology. The focus is now squarely on Tuesday’s jobs data. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.1%, while the S&P 500 dropped 0.2% and the ...