Opera Ltd., headquartered in Oslo, has officially launched Neon, a new AI-powered web browser aiming to reshape amatic casino how we interact online. Rather than just displaying pages, Neon is built to act—it can fill out forms, compare data across sites, generate code snippets, and even execute tasks autonomously via a “Neon Do” feature.

What’s striking is Opera’s decision to run these AI capabilities locally—on your device—minimizing reliance on cloud servers and giving users tighter control over data and privacy. Neon also introduces modular “Tasks” for grouping workflows and “Cards” as reusable prompt templates, helping developers and power users automate repetitive actions.

This launch places Opera directly in the growing “agentic browser” arena alongside browser innovations like Perplexity’s Comet and Arc’s Dia. Opera’s pitch is bold: turn the browser into more than a tool for viewing—it should become your assistant.

For web developers, Neon opens both opportunities and challenges. On one hand, AI features embedded in the browser could simplify everyday tasks like form generation or content scraping. On the other, ensuring apps behave correctly under autonomous AI actions may become a new testing frontier.

Opera plans to roll Neon out via a subscription model. Early access is live now; broader deployment is expected in the months ahead.

Stay tuned—if Neon or similar browsers gain traction, the way we build, test, and secure web applications could shift dramatically.