![urdu fonts are not being seen in opera browser in q mobile urdu fonts are not being seen in opera browser in q mobile](https://venturebeat.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/samsung_5g_ces_2018.png)
Hah, just comparing both lists in the UI makes it clear that consistency is not something Firefox devs. Then why does it take up more space then the bookmarks? Both are just an Icon with a line of text. Still missing an option to fix that waste of space. With that fixed it is at least slightly lighter gray on light gray instead of just light gray for all. Of course that didn't work long but somehow the option still fucked up highlighting of the active tab. Last point, as the new tab style takes up more space than the old style I had it disabled.
![urdu fonts are not being seen in opera browser in q mobile urdu fonts are not being seen in opera browser in q mobile](https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/opera-windows-cbs-works-640x400.png)
That might just trigger an ingrained mental "fuck another incomplete UI framework" response in me, it looks wrong and that the tabs actually still behave like tabs is more surprising than expected, why would anyone expect a button to behave like a tab? The active tab looks like a button, it has no connection to the content at all, while on edge I still have a clear connection. I would prefer the one pixel wide divider "or something". On my system Firefox tabs are only divided by space, there is no obvious "this tab ends here".
#URDU FONTS ARE NOT BEING SEEN IN OPERA BROWSER IN Q MOBILE HOW TO#
A lot of thought may have been how to counter criticism, but that's not the same thing. That page says they "put a lot of thought into it," but I haven't seen where that thought might be reviewable, because I'm skeptical that a lot of thought went into this. Ah, such is the cost of being on the cutting edge with my ESR installation. I still don't know why they changed to that supremely unintuitive "sliding panes" menu design. It's all basically that, more of doing whatever they want and calling people who don't like it wet blankets. Naturally we're going to continue this strategy of fostering attrition until you only ever go to the sites listed on your new tab page (which we're watching how much you use)." "5% of the clicks go to the thing we haven't touched in forever and have actually made worse over the years. "Bookmark bar – About 5% of the clicks go to the section where people bookmark their frequently visited place" So if things just work, you don’t really think about it."Īh yes, and if you can't see the benefits of a change, that just means you're blind to its invisibly good design. All positives, sounds like every change listed is awesome! It's "clean," "inviting," "streamlining," and so on. I dunno, that page looks like 110% received wisdom.