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Opera's new browser can code websites and games for you | TechCrunch
Opera on Tuesday revealed a new browser, called Opera Neon, that will focus on AI workflows and performing tasks on your behalf, like shopping, filling out forms, and coding. The browser is currently behind a waitlist, but the company said users would have to subscribe to use it once it releases. Pricing details were not disclosed. Notably, Opera Neon browser features three new buttons on its sidebar: Chat, Do, and Make. Chat presents a chatbot interface with which you can search the web, get answers to your queries, and ask for more information about webpages you're browsing. Do uses the company's Browser Operator AI agent, which was announced in March. This AI agent is supposedly capable of performing tasks like filling forms or handling your trip bookings locally in the browser. The Make option is also notable, as Opera says it can create games, websites, snippets of code, reports and more with text prompts. The company said the AI workflows that enable this feature are performed through a virtual machine in the cloud, so Neon will work on tasks by itself even if you go offline, and users can run multiple tasks at the same time. All this sounds great on paper, but such AI apps often don't perform as well as they're said to. Plus, Opera is not the only company working on AI agents for browsers: The Browser Company teased an AI-powered browser last December that aims to have agents do stuff for you, and Google is working on projects that bring the web to you through commands.
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Opera's new AI browser promises to write code while you sleep
Jess Weatherbed is a news writer focused on creative industries, computing, and internet culture. Jess started her career at TechRadar, covering news and hardware reviews. The latest web browser coming to Opera's roster embraces AI agents that aim to use the internet for you. The Norwegian tech company describes Opera Neon as an "agentic browser" that has contextual awareness and performs tasks on the users' behalf, including researching, building, and designing whatever you need. "We're at a point where AI can fundamentally change the way we use the internet and perform all sorts of tasks in the browser," Opera senior AI product director Henrik Lexow said in the company's press release. "Opera Neon brings this to our users' fingertips." A notable early adopter feature is an AI engine that Opera says is "capable of understanding and interpreting" what users request, and then making it with the help of cloud-based AI agents. For example, Opera says that Neon can make games, reports, code snippets, and websites, and can work on multiple tasks even when the user has gone offline. Opera hasn't mentioned when this will launch or how much Neon will cost, beyond it being described as a "premium subscription product," so there's currently little information available to back up what the browser is supposedly capable of. Otherwise, Neon offers AI tools similar to those found in Microsoft's Copilot and OpenAI's Operator. Opera says that Neon users can use a chatbot interface to search the web, answer queries, and get "contextual information" from the webpage they have open. Opera Neon also features an AI Agent that Opera previously introduced back in March as "Browser Operator," which allows users to automate routine web tasks, such as shopping, filling in online forms, and booking events or accommodation. Opera says the tool interacts with web page content locally on the browser to preserve privacy and security. Details are otherwise slim about Neon, which is the fifth browser in Opera's quiver, after announcing its mindfulness-focused Air browser in February. We will know more about Opera Neon's real-world capabilities when it fully rolls out into beta -- when, is anyone's guess as the company won't provide us a firm date. You can sign up for the waitlist here.
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Opera teases Neon, its first agentic browser - join the waitlist to try it
Opera has announced that it will release one of the first agentic browsers. Called Neon, this browser will serve two purposes: use AI to automatically perform tasks for users, and serve as an AI playground for future development. Also: Opera's Android browser just got a major tab management upgrade The purpose of an agentic browser is to use AI agents to understand user intent, automate complex tasks, and act on behalf of the user. Agentic browsers move from being a passive tool to access information to an active digital assistant. This isn't the first time Opera has released a browser called Neon. Nearly a decade ago, the company released a concept browser that was intended to serve as an experimental platform for testing new ideas and user interface innovations. Also: The best secure browsers for privacy: Expert tested This time around it's all about AI, and Opera Neon will be able to work with you or for you to help you get things done. The announcement by Opera comes on the heels of Google's I/O, where they announced Shopping Mode for Chrome, which uses AI to tie into a user's searches. Opera Neon will go farther than that. According to Henrik Lexow, senior AI product director at Opera, during the Opera Neon press briefing: "We're at a point where AI can fundamentally change the way we use the internet and perform all sorts of tasks in the browser. Opera Neon brings this to our users' fingertips. We see it as a collaborative platform to shape the next chapter of agentic browsing together with our community." Like the current iteration of Opera, Neon will include a standard AI tool that allows users to chat, search the web, get answers, and access most of the functions found in traditional AI tools. Along with that, there'll be the new AI agent (which was previously showcased as "Browser Operator"), which allows users to automate routine web tasks, such as filling out forms, making hotel reservations, and shopping. Also: Arc reinvented browsing for the better - and that was apparently the problem Another very interesting aspect of Opera Neon is the employment of AI agents that function in a virtual machine -- hosted in the cloud. Those agents can continue working for a user even after they've gone offline. For example, you can ask the browser to create a game. Opera Neon will research, design, and build it even after you've stepped away. With this powerful tool, users can even ask the AI agents to simultaneously make multiple requests, so Opera Neon is a true agentic multitasking tool in web browser form. No release date has been announced, but you can sign up for a wait list to be informed as soon as Opera Neon is available. Get the morning's top stories in your inbox each day with our Tech Today newsletter.
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Opera gives us the first taste of AI-powered web surfing with its new Neon browser
Summary Opera Neon is an AI-first browser, putting a huge emphasis on smart browsing. Features include chat mode and "Browser Operator" to assist users with tasks. It features a unique AI engine in the cloud that can continue working on user requests even offline. We've seen many AI tools within browsers, but what about a browser that puts AI first? If you're on the hunt for a browser that claims to be the first agent app of its kind, Opera has something to show you. The company has announced the launch of Opera Neon, an agent browser that puts a huge emphasis on using AI to help you browse smarter. Related Opera GX's new tab management features let you find what you need at the height of a gaming session Opera GX is slaying the scariest monster of them all: 47 character build tabs. Posts Opera Neon brings AI-powered browsing to everyone In an emailed press release, Opera discussed its brand new browser, Neon. This version of Opera takes a more "AI first" approach, with a lot of tools at your disposal to get what you want done faster. At its core, you've got a few features you'd expect from an AI-centric browser. For example, there's a chat mode that allows you to talk to an AI to solve your burning questions. However, Opera Neon also includes a tool called "Browser Operator," which takes into account your queries, the page you're looking at, and the information on it to piece together a solution. Opera claims that Browser Operator can fill in forms and go shopping for you, all from a prompt. However, there's a new feature Opera claims that no other browser has done just yet. Opera Neon will feature a full AI engine that can churn over your requests on the cloud, even after you've turned your PC off: Neon employs AI agents that work beyond the browser-in a virtual machine hosted in the cloud-and can continue working on the users' creation even when they go offline. Opera Neon users can, for example, ask the browser to make a game, a report, a snippet of code, or even a website-it will research, design, and build whatever users need. Henrik Lexow, Senior AI Product Director at Opera, thinks this is the best time for Opera to make an AI browser: "We're at a point where AI can fundamentally change the way we use the internet and perform all sorts of tasks in the browser. Opera Neon brings this to our users' fingertips. We see it as a collaborative platform to shape the next chapter of agentic browsing together with our community." Opera states that its Neon browser is a "premium subscription product," and that early adopters can join the queue to get their hands on this new browser. In the meantime, if you'd like to learn more about Opera's other browsers, check out these reasons to use the Opera GX browser and these Opera features we wish Chrome would introduce.
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Opera's new 'fully agentic' browser can surf the web for you
It was only earlier this year Norway's Opera released a new browser, and now it's adding yet another offering to an already crowded field. Opera is billing Neon as a "fully agentic browser." It comes with an integrated AI that can chat with users and surf the web on their behalf. Compared to competing agents, the company says Neon is faster and more efficient at navigating the internet on its own due to the fact it parses webpages by analyzing their layout data. Building on Opera's recent preview of Browser Operator, Neon can also complete tasks for you, like filling out a form or doing some online shopping. The more you use Neon to write, the more it will learn your personal style and adapt to it. All of this happens locally, in order to ensure user data remains private. Additionally, Neon can make things for you, including websites, animations and even game prototypes, according to Opera. If you ask Neon to build something particularly complicated or time-consuming, it can continue the task even when you're offline. This part of the browser's feature set depends on a connection to Opera's servers in Europe where privacy laws are more robust than in North America. "Opera Neon is the first step towards fundamentally re-imagining what a browser can be in the age of intelligent agents," the company says. If all of this sounds familiar, it's because other companies, including Google and OpenAI, have been working on similar products. In the case of Google, the search giant began previewing Project Mariner, an extension that adds a web-surfing agent to Chrome, last December. OpenAI, similarly, has been working on its own "Operator" mode since the start of the year. Neon, therefore, sees Opera attempting to position itself as an innovator in hopes of claiming market share, but the company has a difficult task ahead. According to data from StatCounter, only about 2.09 percent of internet users use Opera to access the web. Chrome, by contrast, commands a dominant 66.45 percent of the market. That's a hard hill to climb when your competitors are working on similar features. It's also worth asking if an agentic browser is something people really want. Opera suggests Neon is smart enough to book a trip for you. That sounds great in theory, but what if the agent makes an error and books the wrong connecting flight. A certain amount of friction ensures users pay attention and check things on their own.
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Opera's Neon AI agentic browser promises to do everything - even write code while you're offline.
Serving tech enthusiasts for over 25 years. TechSpot means tech analysis and advice you can trust. What just happened? Opera has unveiled another new browser, and this one has a differentiating feature: it's the first "AI agentic browser," meaning it can perform tasks on your behalf, including shopping, form-filling, coding, researching, and more, even when you're offline. Opera Neon - the company used the name for a different browser in 2017 that didn't gain much traction - is designed to understand your intent, assist with tasks, and take actions, according to the website. The browser has three buttons on the sidebar: Chat, Do, and Make. Make is the most interesting as this is used to make websites, games, code snippets, and more, all using plain English text prompts. It does this using an AI engine with the help of cloud-based AI agents, which means it can work on several tasks when the user is offline. The Chat option is similar to other AI chatbots, letting you ask general questions or something about the webpage you're viewing, generate images, summarize articles, search the web, etc. Then there's the Do button. This is where you can instruct Neon's AI agent to carry out autonomous web interactions, such as navigating websites and inputting information. It can also carry out booking, buying, and signing-up tasks. Opera's examples of its abilities include planning trips and finding and buying items such as clothes. The AI agent doing all this manual work is the Browser Operator that Opera introduced in March. Opera says it does everything locally in the browser to protect user security. While Opera Neon does sound interesting, it seems a lot of people are already worried about AI's penchant for making stuff up and getting things completely wrong. And while Opera assures a high level of security, that might not be enough to convince everyone. Nevertheless, there are several other companies working on AI agents that will also search the web and carry out online tasks for you. Opera says Neon will be a premium subscription product when it arrives. We don't know when that will be or how much it will cost, but you can sign up for the waitlist here.
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Opera's Neon AI agentic browser promises to do everything -...
Opera Neon - the company used the name for a different browser in 2017 that didn't gain much traction - is designed to understand your intent, assist with tasks, and take actions, according to the website. The browser has three buttons on the sidebar: Chat, Do, and Make. Make is the most interesting as this is used to make websites, games, code snippets, and more, all using plain English text prompts. It does this using an AI engine with the help of cloud-based AI agents, which means it can work on several tasks when the user is offline. The Chat option is similar to other AI chatbots, letting you ask general questions or something about the webpage you're viewing, generate images, summarize articles, search the web, etc. Then there's the Do button. This is where you can instruct Neon's AI agent to carry out autonomous web interactions, such as navigating websites and inputting information. It can also carry out booking, buying, and signing-up tasks. Opera's examples of its abilities include planning trips and finding and buying items such as clothes. The AI agent doing all this manual work is the Browser Operator that Opera introduced in March. Opera says it does everything locally in the browser to protect user security. While Opera Neon does sound interesting, it seems a lot of people are already worried about AI's penchant for making stuff up and getting things completely wrong. And while Opera assures a high level of security, that might not be enough to convince everyone. Nevertheless, there are several other companies working on AI agents that will also search the web and carry out online tasks for you. Opera says Neon will be a premium subscription product when it arrives. We don't know when that will be or how much it will cost, but you can sign up for the waitlist here. Permalink to story:
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Opera Neon browser launches with built-in AI and a monthly fee
Opera is trying to keep Opera Neon's local AI close, personal, and worth the extra expense. Opera is resurrecting Opera Neon, a browser concept first introduced in 2017, and equipping it with the latest tech trend: agentic AI -- an assistant you can assign tasks to, which it will carry out autonomously. Opera Neon will work like a normal browser. Opera, however, is integrating local AI that you can chat with privately and ask to do tasks and combining it with an interface to a remote server that will serve as a workspace of sorts for Opera Neon's AI creation tools. Most browsers are free; the twist here is that Opera Neon will require a paid subscription of an unknown amount, and potential users will be subject to a waitlist. Opera has a history of experimenting with innovative concepts -- it was an early proponent of VPNs, for example. The original 2017 launch of Opera Neon reimagined the browser with visual icons instead of text bookmarks and vertical tabs that bubbled up with frequent use. It was too radical to catch on, though that was never really the goal. Ironically, its revival comes just days after The Browser Company of New York shelved its Arc browser -- with similar vertical tabs -- in favor of the new Dio agentic browser, now in alpha testing. Opera believes that Opera Neon will be a "cloud computer" and that it will operate more effectively based upon what it knows about you and your preferences. Whether that ends up being true or not, there are three concepts that Opera is designing Neon around: a local chatbot, the agentic "browser operator" it showed recently, and the "cloud computer," which sounds like a remote LLM that's been tuned for coding. It's likely that owning and operating this remote service is why you'll have to pay for Opera Neon. The ability to chat with a browser isn't really new, as everything from Microsoft Edge (and soon, Google Chrome) to Brave has integrated AI into the browser for tasks like summarizing web pages. Opera does say that it will be able to analyze the web page via the DOM tree and layout data, rather than "reading" the web page via OCR, like Microsoft's Copilot Vision does. All of the information Opera Neon's chatbot sees will remain on your PC, Opera says. It's the agentic technology that will make or break Opera Neon. Opera's earlier demonstration of shopping agents was effective in concept, but how quickly a human user will accept its decisions and learn to trust it is unknown and that's assuming it works. Opera Neon's ability to "make" things via its hosted cloud computer is another unknown as well. "Once the tasks have been defined, it employs AI agents contained in a virtual machine on our European-hosted servers to make your idea into a tangible (digital) result," Opera says of this cloud computer: "Think of it as an orchestra conductor that understands the whole piece of music - your needs and wishes - and points to the different members of the orchestra to execute their parts - task division and execution." Opera Neon will "happily install Python libraries and JavaScript frameworks to get there" and self-correct in case of errors. That all sounds good, but as so many people are willing to point out, AI companies not only haven't always delivered on their promises, they've made some ugly mistakes. Even if you are willing to accept that risk, you must also have a need for the capabilities that Opera Neon offers. Will you be willing to pay whatever Opera is charging so that you can create your own versions of, say, Battleship, with anime characters? Or code an app to help pick out gifts for your nephew's birthday well in advance?
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Opera unveils Neon: a subscription-based AI browser - 9to5Mac
In early April, Opera showcased AI Browser Operator, a first look at its vision for agentic browsing in the AI era. Now, the company is detailing what that actually looks like: rather than being just a feature, Operator is part of an entirely new browser called Opera Neon. Opera says Neon doesn't just help you browse, but actively performs tasks on your behalf. That includes researching, designing, and even building things like websites, code snippets, reports, and games. The company explains that these tasks are handled by AI agents running in the cloud, which means they can continue processing even when your machine goes offline. At the same time, Neon will also count with Browser Operator, a built-in AI agent that users can chat with to get contextual answers, automate web tasks (like filling out forms or booking a hotel), and interact directly with webpage content. Here's Henrik Lexow, Opera's Senior AI Product Director, in a buzzword-heavy statement: "We're at a point where AI can fundamentally change the way we use the internet and perform all sorts of tasks in the browser. Opera Neon brings this to our users' fingertips. (...) We see it as a collaborative platform to shape the next chapter of agentic browsing together with our community." Opera's new browser joins what's quickly becoming a crowded AI-enhanced category, alongside Microsoft Edge with Copilot, Chrome with Gemini, Perplexity's Comet, Brave with Leo, Firefox's recent beta launch of Link Previews, and even Apple's more subtle AI-powered Summaries tucked away within Reader Mode in Safari. For now, though, there are more questions than answers: we don't know how well Neon will actually perform in real-world tasks beyond the cliché trip planning demo, how much it will cost, or when users will get access beyond joining a waitlist. But if Opera delivers on even half of what it's promising, Neon could really be a preview of what to expect from web browsing in the near future.
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Move over, OpenAI! Opera Neon is a new AI browser that can surf the web and even build games while you sleep
Remember Browser Operator? Opera is taking all of this agentic AI tech and launching it in a new browser called Opera Neon. But there's more to it than that. With Neon, the Norwegian browser company is keen to build a one-stop shop for basically any sort of AI interactions -- be it chatting to an AI agent or even getting it to build and code games while you sleep. The official launch date is unknown (as is the subscription price), but a waitlist is now open for sign ups and will let you try the Alpha when it launches. Let's get into what it can do, and how it compares to the likes of what ChatGPT and Google Gemini can do. Its functionalities are split into three different categories - Chat, Do and Make. So on paper, it seems like Opera has taken this nugget of great tech in Browser Operator and turned it up to 11 by making a big bet on what the future of web browsing will actually be. It's a bold take, and after testing the underlying tech myself a month ago, I do believe that an agentic assistant is core to the future of web browsing. But there's a couple of questions to overcome first. Let's dig into this a little deeper, as I am the only person outside of Opera to have played around with the Browser Operator that runs underneath a lot of this. Up until now, agentic browsers have taken screenshots of a website, interpreted them with vision AI and decided the next step. This required a remote desktop session, and has been demonstrably slow and clumsy in what it can do. Opera Neon is set to do things differently - stripping away those UI elements that cause agentic AI systems to trip over so often and focus on the "textual representation of websites" to interact with them. In my time using Browser Operator and talking to the Opera team, this is taking advantage of something web developers call the "a11y" level - the accessibility reader mode that a lot of websites have, which just so happens to make it a whole lot easier for an agentic AI to browse too. And the end result is a dramatic speed boost over the more clunkier way of doing it. Pair that with the AI agent that looks set to work similarly to what we see in the chatbot overlay on Opera One R2, and that builder too, and this is looking like a pretty sweet package. That's the ultimate question. Opera Neon is a "premium subscription product" in the company's own words, and the word "premium" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. With the way this has been built around three core pillars that the likes of a ChatGPT Plus subscription or Gemini Advanced (giving you Gemini AI in Chrome) would get you, Opera needs to either aim for $20 or undercut the competition for the chance to really get out ahead here. Speaking to Opera, the team assured me that the browsing part "will remain free of charge," and the subscription covers the "AI agentic capabilities of Opera Neon." So your browser isn't just going to stop you from surfing if you're unable to make the payment. But this is going to be a good litmus test for whether people will invest in this future? Will people pay for the future of web browsers? Based on OpenAI's numbers, it seems like the answer is a resounding "yes," but it's going to be an interesting few months while we find out for sure.
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Opera rethinks the role of the browser with Neon, the first AI agentic web browser that will do tasks for you
The new premium browser is subscription-only and coming soon Opera Neon is a new premium subscription web browser that can understand your commands in natural language thanks to AI while also performing a variety of tasks for you. For instance you could ask Opera Neon to produce a detailed report, make a website or even code projects like games, all in the browser. "We're at a point where AI can fundamentally change the way we use the internet and perform all sorts of tasks in the browser. Opera Neon brings this to our users' fingertips," said Henrik Lexow, Senior AI Product Director at Opera. "We see it as a collaborative platform to shape the next chapter of agentic browsing together with our community." Of course, you can currently chat with AI in the standard Opera browser, which has access to Aria AI and ChatGPT in the sidebar, but Opera Neon is a fully agentic browser, which means you can ask it to perform tasks for you as well as chat or search with AI. That could include filling out a form that appears in the website you're viewing, making a hotel reservation, or even going shopping. Best of all, it does all this locally in the browser, without risking your privacy or security. The AI agent inside Opera Neon has previously been showcased by Opera as Browser Operator and you can give it tasks with simple prompts like "Keep me updated on the latest breakthroughs in artificial intelligence," and it would regularly collect and summarize the most relevant articles. So, instead of wading through an endless news feed, you'd get just what matters to you the most, neatly packaged. You can also chat with Opera Neon as if it were an AI chatbot, just like ChatGPT, and it can also search the web for you to find answers. Opera Neon boils its core functionality down to three main options: Chat, Do and Make. Chat is the chatbot function. Here you can ask the AI contextual questions about the web page you are viewing and search the web. Do is where Opera Neon can interact with the website you are viewing. We're talking about things like filling in forms, booking reservations and shopping. This is the technology we've previous known as Bowser Operator. Make is the truly new part of Opera Neon. Here you can ask the browser to make you something, and it will interpret what you mean, then go away and do it for you. Once you've tasked it with making something you're free to go off and do something else. Opera Neon looks like being one of the most exciting uses of AI I've seen in a while. The prospect of being able to ask the AI questions about the website you're currently viewing in the browser and getting reliable answers back isn't new, but the agentic qualities of the browser sound incredibly valuable. Opera Neon isn't out yet, but Opera says you can join the waitlist today. In the meantime, Opera has made this video to explain what an AI agent is:
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Opera's futuristic browser from 2017 returns as an agentic AI that will write code for you
The new browser debuted on Wednesday and will be available as a subscription service. Opera has set a waitlist for those wanting to try out Neon. In Opera's words, "you could simply state your wish and deploy AI to make a website, a prototype of a game, or even an animated model that explains the law of momentum, ready to share with your class." Yes, this browser promises to write code for you. But what's most surprising about it isn't the AI itself. It's the fact that Opera didn't jump on the bandwagon when the AI hype train took off. In fact, it's been working on a futuristic browser for nearly a decade. Opera introduced Neon in January 2017 as a futuristic concept browser, essentially the company's vision for the future of browsers. Back then, Opera mentioned that Neon was built from the same browser engine as the regular Opera browser and was designed with content front and center, aiming to help users focus on what matters online. The concept browser provided "fun ways to interact with web content," such as the ability to "pop content out from the web," essentially Opera's interpretation of picture-in-picture. Though this is now a standard feature in modern browsers, it felt futuristic then! Opera showed off a new user interface with Neon back then, including a start page that used the user's current desktop background image, tab management features like an "intelligence system that automatically manages tabs," a new visual tab bar on the right side of the browser window, and more. Fast-forward to today, and Neon is making a comeback, but Opera is no longer calling it a concept browser. Many elements from the original concept (including the name itself, which Opera says has become "a symbol of innovation and change") have made their way into the new browser. For instance, the "different tab behaviors," the split-screen mode, and the multimedia players will all be found in the new version. Opera history lesson aside, what really matters now is the new Opera Neon, a fully agentic browser designed to automate a variety of everyday tasks. As its "agentic" descriptor suggests, Opera Neon can browse the web as your agent and perform tasks you'd typically do while browsing, like purchasing or booking your next flight. It can also handle tasks like researching topics or building things for you, like interactive web applications. I Agentic AI is at the cutting edge of internet-based computing. Google just unveiled the latest updates to its agentic AI technology at Google I/O last week. The key difference between Opera and Google Gemini, Microsoft Copilot, and other AI services is that Opera says Neon isn't just another AI chatbot or assistant. It's designed to "become your partner in the age of intelligent AI agents." Instead of merely assisting with your tasks or telling you how to do them, it does them for you. Neon is capable of operating itself based on your intent. However, this resembles Google's emerging agentic tech, specifically Project Astra. AI agents have been talked about a lot in the last few months. Microsoft's annual Build event primarily focused on AI agents. And with so many agents already out there (and even more in the works), it naturally raises the question: What good is a browser built with AI at its core? Opera believes we're currently "at the brink of a new web," which it calls the agentic web. The company believes that since the browser is typically one's most essential and frequently used app, it only makes sense for it to become the central hub for AI agents. This way, you can offload most of the tasks you don't want to do yourself to AI agents within your browser while you continue to get on with your day. The browser's functionality comes down to three use cases: Chat, Do, and Make.
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You Can Sign up Now to Try Opera's Mysterious AI Browser
Freelancers cover news, tech, and entertainment for Lifehacker. The company behind the Opera browser is launching yet another AI tool with Opera Neon, an agentic AI browser. This basically means that it's a browser with an AI agent built in, which can go beyond answering questions and will purportedly be able to browse the internet for you to help you get various things done. This includes helping you plan trips, booking vacations, and even creating web apps with simple natural language prompts. Oddly enough, this isn't Opera's first go at agentic AI, as it follows the announcement for the standard Opera browser's Browser Operator tool. Technically, Browser Operator isn't released yet, but it seems the difference is that Neon's use cases will be a bit broader, as the AI will supposedly even able to generate content in the cloud while you're offline. The catch is that Neon isn't free, and is currently invite-only. Opera says it'll require a paid subscription when it launches, and while the company hasn't revealed the pricing or the launch date yet, you can join a waitlist to get notified about details closer to release, plus get in line for an invite. Opera says you'll be able to use the integrated AI as a chatbot and it will be able to search the web to find answers for you. It'll also be able to handle repetitive tasks such as filling forms and shopping. The biggest draw seems to be its ability to create content, though. On the Opera Neon website, a sample screenshot shows a someone requesting the AI to make a "retro snake game" for them. One plus going for this product is that it claims to be able to analyze webpages without recording your screen all the time (looking at you, Recall). Opera also claims that your browsing history, website data, and login information will be stored locally on your computer, which is good for anyone with privacy concerns. It goes without saying that all of these features will only be as useful as the AI model is accurate. The last thing I'd want is to have a faceless AI model book an overpriced hotel in a shady location, so I'll be taking all these trip planning claims with a pinch of salt until I see Neon in action. While launching new products always gets more attention, the sheer number of Opera's recent releases means that its browser lineup is getting a bit confusing. Opera currently has the following browsers listed on its website: Opera Browser, Opera GX, Opera Air, and Opera Mini. This makes Opera Neon the fifth product in the lineup. Each has its own specialty, but I'm starting to feel a little choice paralysis here.
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Opera's New Neon Browser Will Surf the Web and Code Games While You Sleep
One of the Best Chrome Alternatives Is Dead, but You Have Other Options Opera's browser roster is expanding once more, and this time, AI is at the centre of its world. Opera Neon is a fully agentic AI browser that can surf the web and code games for you -- or at least, cut down on the admin of life and leave you more time for the actual fun stuff you really enjoy. What Is Opera Neon? Opera Neon promises a new dawn for web browsing, and a big step forward for AI agents and mass adoption. Your browser can now take care of tasks in the background, largely completely automated, leaving you free to get on with other tasks. So, instead of having to sit and find, say, train tickets for your upcoming journey or a booking for a restaurant in a couple of days, you can prompt Opera Neon to do the work for you. Once prompted, Opera Neon gets to work, only coming back to you when it needs ultimate confirmation, i.e., complete a booking with your final overview. Opera Neon can fully understand web pages, operating natively in your browser. It doesn't send data to a remote server for analysis, instead using a document object model (DOM) tree to work through pages in a logical, hierarchical manner. In that, Neon can understand the context of a web page, including its fiddly forms, and respond accurately. However, Opera also says that Neon can work offline and process your requests in a virtual machine running in the cloud. So, you can request Opera Neon to work on a prompt, close your computer, and head off. When you come back, Neon will have processed the request and delivered the information you need. Neon employs AI agents that work beyond the browser-in a virtual machine hosted in the cloud-and can continue working on the users' creation even when they go offline. Opera Neon users can, for example, ask the browser to make a game, a report, a snippet of code, or even a website-it will research, design, and build whatever users need. So, at its core, Opera Neon will operate like a regular browser. You'll still use it to browse the web as usual. There is just now the extra AI-centric focus that should make your whole life more streamlined, and that's something everyone should be interested in. Opera's Browser Operator Comes to Life I was lucky enough to be shown a preview version of Opera's Neon browser at its Browser Days 2025 event in Lisbon, Portugal. To clarify, Opera never requests specific coverage of these events, and this is the first time I'm writing about Browser Operator and Opera Neon. It's interesting to see how much Browser Operator has developed from the world's first preview we were shown in Lisbon to a fully-fledged agentic AI browser. The first outing for the Browser Operator, the Opera Neon's core AI agentic tech, actually worked surprisingly well, considering it was its first live demo. The AI agent successfully ordered a bouquet for one of the other journalists on the trip, although it required a gentle prod to get it over the line -- with some understandable nervous laughter from the Opera development team. Nonetheless, the flowers arrived the next day, bought by the AI, with the bare minimum of interaction from the Opera team. Now, Opera has taken it a step further. Opera Neon pulls elements from its existing Aria AI, which can already read from and interact with webpages in the Opera Browser and use features like its AI-powered tab commands, and Browser Operator adds a new level of automation to the process. Having watched the latest demos of Opera Neon, it seems more competent than its fledgling demo earlier in 2025. One of the main talking points after the original demo was, "But I can probably do this faster." It was a fair point. I'd previously tried to use an AI agentic tool (not Opera's Browser Operator, I should note) to book a train ticket, and it took a long time and struggled to find the right tickets. Whereas Browser Agent's demo worked well, it still required some interaction to gently nudge it, although it completed 99% of the job. But given Opera Neon is taking the AI-agentic browser to the next step, it appears most of these issues are ironed out (or being ironed out) to make it a truly useful desktop companion. Related Opera's New Air Browser Is All About Mindfulness -- and It Actually Works Think your browser can't help you relax? Think again. Posts What Does Opera Neon Mean for Opera's Other Browsers? But that doesn't mean Opera's other browsers are consigned to history. While Opera Neon is a premium, standalone browser, Opera One R2, Opera Air, and Opera Mini will all remain. I spoke to Henrik Lexow, Opera's Senior AI Product Director, who confirmed that Opera believes now is the time for AI agents and what Opera calls Web 4o. Opera Neon is an agentic AI playground right now. It will enable users to do things they simply cannot do in any other browser, including our own -- to interact with the AI agentic web in the best way possible and to have AI agents perform tasks and even make things for them. It's not in competition with our other products, and by launching it this way, we will work with the community to shape the product. Opera Neon isn't quite ready for lift-off just yet. You can sign up for Opera Neon to be an early adopter, but the process is invite-only, so you may have to wait a little while. Still, as Opera wants its community to shape Neon's development, I'd expect the invites to start rolling out soon.
[15]
Opera Neon's AI Agents Can Fetch Information and Build Websites for You
Opera Neon features three AI agents -- Chat, Do, and Make The three options are placed on the sidebar Opera Neon will be offered as part of a paid subscription Opera Neon, the company's latest artificial intelligence (AI) agent-powered browser, was unveiled on Tuesday. The Norwegian tech giant said that the new browser experience was being developed for the agentic web, and it reimagines how a browser looks and functions. It is focused on building AI-powered agentic workflows that either work alongside the user or perform tasks autonomously in the background. While the company did not provide any release dates, it said Opera Neon will release soon with limited, invite-only access. In a series of posts on X (formerly known as Twitter), the official handle of Opera announced the new agentic web browser. Describing the new browser, the company said, "Opera Neon can browse with you or for you, take action & help you get things done." Notably, the company will first provide access to the browser to its community members on an invite basis, and later it will be available as part of a paid subscription. Opera has also opened a microsite for the web browser where individuals can sign up for a waitlist to get invited to try it out. Opera Neon primarily has three features. First is called Chat, which is a chatbot-like experience where users can type their queries in natural language and the AI agent will find the information and share it. It appears to work like any other AI chatbot with a web search function. It can also generate text, translate, research topics, and more. The second feature, dubbed Do, is described as a browser-based agent that can complete certain tasks such as booking a table at a restaurant, planning a trip, and adding products to the cart. It is powered by the company's recently unveiled Browser Operator AI agent, and it can complete tasks autonomously in the background. Finally, Make is the company's most ambitious offering. It can be used to build a website, create a document, or to develop a retro game. The company did not delve deep into its workings, but based on the description, it appears to be powered by a coding agent, similar to OpenAI's Codex. No other features were revealed at this time. However, the company highlighted that Opera Neon will act as its playground to test new and innovative agentic features.
[16]
Opera Unveils 'Neon', an Agentic AI Browser That Can Perform Actions
Opera Neon is a subscription-based product, and currently, it's invite-only for community members. Opera has announced a new 'Neon' agentic web browser that is designed to assist with tasks. It can understand your intent and perform actions on your behalf. There are three core functionalities of the Opera Neon browser: Chat, Do, and Make. The Chat feature can answer questions for you just like any other AI chatbot. It can search the web, research, translate, and generate contextually relevant answers for you. The Do feature delivers the agentic web browsing experience in Opera Neo. It's like OpenAI's Operator AI agent that navigates the web to complete tasks. You can use the AI agent in Opera Neon to navigate websites, enter information, delegate tasks like booking tickets, and buying things. Finally, the Make feature can take your prompt and create new content, games, or web apps. It can generate code to visualize your idea, or if you want to play some retro games, you can ask Opera Neon to create a game for you. Opera Neon is currently invite-only, and community members can join the waitlist to access the new agentic web browser. In addition, the browser is a subscription-based product, but Opera has not announced pricing tiers yet. It is worth noting that several companies are building AI-first web browsers. Perplexity is about to release its agentic Comet web browser, and The Browser Company is working on its AI-powered Dia browser. Meanwhile, Google has integrated Gemini into Chrome with an Agent mode, but it's currently available to Google AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers in the US.
[17]
Opera Launches Neon: An AI Browser That Can Shop, Code, and Create
The Competitive Landscape: Google and Others Join the AI Agent Race Opera isn't alone in this browser AI race. The Browser Company previewed an agent-based browser in December 2024. Meanwhile, Google is actively building its own AI features for search and productivity. With tech giants in the mix, Opera's early mover advantage hinges on how well its AI agents perform in real-world usage. is a bold step toward a future where browsers are platforms for creation and automation. If it lives up to the hype, Neon could redefine how we interact with the internet. Until then, all eyes are on Opera as it prepares for the official rollout of this AI-first browser. Also Read:
[18]
Opera's new AI browser Neon: 3 Things you should know
With local AI processing and offline capabilities, Opera Neon prioritizes privacy while enhancing browser intelligence. Opera has unveiled Neon, its vision for the future of web browsing: a fully AI-native, "agentic" browser designed not just to support your online activity - but to do it for you. Neon is still in early access, available by invitation only, and most of its ambitious features remain untested in the wild. Still, the concept behind Neon is too intriguing to ignore. But how does it compare, at least on paper, to Microsoft Edge and its built-in Copilot intelligent AI assistant? Here's what you need to know. Opera Neon introduces three distinct AI-powered modes, each accessible via a sidebar: Chat: A conversational AI assistant that can search the web, manage tabs, analyze images, summarize content, answer questions, and support multilingual and voice-based queries. It's essentially an always-available, context-aware smart companion for web navigation. Do: This feature, powered by Opera's Browser Operator AI, handles practical tasks like filling out forms, booking travel, and managing actions online. It operates locally for enhanced privacy and speed, acting like a true autonomous agent that performs tasks on your behalf. Make: Using a cloud-based virtual machine, this mode can generate websites, games, code, and reports from simple prompts. Impressively, it can keep working while you're offline and supports multiple workflows running in parallel. Opera Neon positions itself as an agentic browser. It's built to understand your intent and autonomously carry out complex digital tasks, without constant input. Also read: AI agents explained: Why OpenAI, Google and Microsoft are building smarter AI agents That includes executing multi-step processes like booking flights, auto-filling paperwork, or even building a website while you're away from your keyboard. This is a stark contrast to Copilot's user-driven approach, where each task still requires your manual prompt and confirmation. If Opera's agentic model works in practice, it could drastically reduce the friction of everyday digital tasks - and possibly shift the entire browsing paradigm. Opera Neon also aims to differentiate itself on privacy, multitasking performance and monetization (that's a first in browsers, isn't it?). Here's what we know so far: Privacy First: Most AI-powered functions run locally within the browser. Sensitive data such as login credentials, cookies, and browsing history don't leave your device. Only the "Make" feature leverages the cloud, and even then, it's in an isolated, secure environment. Multitasking Power: Neon supports running several tasks at once - like building a game while auto-filling travel forms - something no mainstream browser currently does natively. Premium Experience: Opera Neon will follow a subscription model. While pricing and specific tiers haven't been revealed yet, the core AI capabilities are expected to be part of the paid offering. Also read: 5 features that make Microsoft Edge a better browser than Google Chrome Opera Neon is staking out a bold position in the browser wars, offering a tool that promises to transform the web from something you navigate into something that works for you. It's less a browser and more a digital co-pilot - if it works as promised. But for now, that remains speculative. Neon is not yet publicly available beyond a closed waitlist. There's no public track record for its performance, reliability, or how intuitive this new AI-centric experience will actually feel. And with a premium pricing model on the horizon, it will need to substantially outperform free alternatives like Edge + Copilot to justify its value. Still, it's a bold experiment - and one worth watching closely. Don't uninstall Edge just yet because we'll be taking a closer look at Opera Neon in action as soon as it becomes publicly available. Stay tuned for our full hands-on review when the browser officially launches.
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Opera introduces Neon, a new AI-powered 'agentic browser' that can perform tasks autonomously, including coding, web design, and form-filling, even when users are offline.
Opera, the Norwegian tech company, has unveiled its latest innovation in web browsing: Opera Neon. This new "agentic browser" promises to revolutionize how users interact with the internet by leveraging advanced AI capabilities 1.
Opera Neon introduces three primary functions: Chat, Do, and Make. The Chat feature provides a chatbot interface for web searches and contextual information about browsing content. The Do function utilizes the Browser Operator AI agent to automate tasks such as form-filling and trip bookings. Perhaps most intriguingly, the Make option claims to create games, websites, code snippets, and reports based on text prompts 2.
Source: TechCrunch
A standout feature of Neon is its use of cloud-based AI agents. These agents can continue working on user requests even when the user goes offline, potentially allowing for complex tasks to be completed without constant user supervision 3.
Opera Neon represents a shift towards an "AI-first" approach in browser design. The browser aims to understand user intent, automate complex tasks, and act on behalf of the user, transforming the browser from a passive tool into an active digital assistant 4.
Opera emphasizes that many of Neon's AI interactions, including the Browser Operator feature, occur locally on the user's device to preserve privacy and security. However, the cloud-based AI agents operate on Opera's servers in Europe, where privacy laws are generally more robust 5.
Opera's introduction of Neon comes at a time when other tech giants are also exploring AI-enhanced browsing experiences. Google has previewed Project Mariner, an extension adding a web-surfing agent to Chrome, while OpenAI has been developing its own "Operator" mode 5.
Source: Beebom
Currently, Opera Neon is behind a waitlist, and the company has stated that it will be a premium subscription product. Specific pricing details and a firm release date have not yet been disclosed 1.
While the concept of an agentic browser is exciting, some experts raise questions about the potential for errors in autonomous decision-making. For instance, if the browser books a trip independently, there's a risk of mistakes that a human user might have caught 5.
Source: NDTV Gadgets 360
As Opera Neon moves closer to release, it represents a bold step towards reimagining the role of web browsers in an AI-driven future. However, its success will likely depend on how well it can deliver on its promises and address potential concerns about autonomy and user control.
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