Opera’s Browser Now Builds Websites & Games Automatically

▼ Summary
– Opera launched Opera Neon, a new AI-focused browser designed to automate tasks like shopping, form-filling, and coding.
– The browser is currently behind a waitlist and will require a subscription upon release, though pricing details remain undisclosed.
– Opera Neon features three sidebar buttons: Chat (for chatbot-powered searches), Do (for AI-driven task automation), and Make (for creating content like games or code).
– The Make function uses cloud-based AI workflows, allowing tasks to continue offline and enabling users to run multiple tasks simultaneously.
– While promising, AI browser features like Opera Neon’s may face performance challenges, and competitors like The Browser Company and Google are also developing similar AI-powered tools.
Opera’s latest browser innovation takes automation to new heights with AI-powered website and game creation built directly into the browsing experience. The newly unveiled Opera Neon introduces smart features that handle everything from basic web searches to complex coding tasks without leaving the browser window.
Currently available through a waitlist system, this premium browser will eventually require a subscription, though Opera hasn’t shared specific pricing details yet. What sets Neon apart are three prominent sidebar buttons that unlock its AI capabilities: Chat, Do, and Make – each designed to streamline different aspects of online activity.
The Chat function provides instant access to a conversational AI assistant that answers questions, explains webpage content, and performs web searches through natural dialogue. For more hands-off automation, the Do button activates Opera’s Browser Operator AI – an intelligent agent that tackles practical tasks like form completion and travel arrangements directly within the browser environment.
Perhaps most impressive is the Make feature, which transforms text prompts into functional digital products. Users can generate complete websites, working game prototypes, code segments, or detailed reports simply by describing what they need. Opera’s cloud-based virtual machine handles the heavy lifting, allowing simultaneous task processing and offline functionality once initiated.
While these capabilities sound revolutionary, the real-world performance remains to be seen. Opera isn’t alone in pursuing browser-based AI solutions – competitors like The Browser Company and Google are developing similar agent-based systems that promise to reshape how we interact with the web. The race to build the most effective AI-powered browser is clearly heating up.
(Source: TechCrunch)