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June 11, 2025Opera Neon, accessible at operaneon.com, is the world’s first AI agentic browser, designed to understand user intent, automate tasks, and create content like websites, games, or reports. As a content creator constantly multitasking across research, social media, and project management, I used to lose hours navigating repetitive web tasks. Neon has revolutionized that, acting like a digital assistant that browses, builds, and automates for me. Let me share why this tool has become my web superpower and why it’s a must for anyone ready to rethink browsing.
Neon’s interface is sleek: sign up via the invite-only waitlist at operaneon.com, and its three core modes—Chat, Do, and Make—spring to life. I tested Chat by asking, “Summarize trends in AI for 2025,” and Neon scoured the web, delivering a concise report with sourced insights in seconds. The Do mode, powered by the “Browser Operator” AI, shone when I tasked it with booking a mock trip from Oslo to Lisbon. It filled forms, compared flights, and suggested hotels, saving me 30 minutes of clicking. The Make mode blew me away—I prompted “Build a simple portfolio website,” and Neon coded a functional site in the cloud while I worked offline, ready for tweaks in an hour. Web sources call it a “game-changer for agentic browsing” (operaneon.com), and X posts echo the hype, noting its ability to “shop, book, and code autonomously”
What’s got me hooked is its proactive intelligence. Neon’s AI agents run locally for privacy, using a11y-level web access for speed and accuracy, and can multitask in the cloud, like coding a game while drafting a report. I used it to create a stock analysis page for a client, blending market data and visuals, which cut my prep time by 60%. It’s subscription-based (pricing TBD), invite-only for now, and works across devices. Compared to SigmaOS, Neon’s task automation and creation tools feel more robust, though SigmaOS excels at tab organization
Neon isn’t just for creators like me. Developers, entrepreneurs, or students can automate workflows, prototype apps, or research effortlessly. I shared it with a dev friend who built a game demo in hours, not days. Its strength lies in its context-aware AI and cloud multitasking, but the invite-only beta and unclear pricing may deter some, per X feedback. Complex tasks occasionally need precise prompts to avoid hiccups, and traditional browsers like Chrome offer more extensions
It’s not perfect, though. The waitlist limits access, and while privacy is prioritized, users should review data policies for cloud tasks (operaneon.com). For extension-heavy workflows, Firefox may still edge out. Still, Neon’s bold vision keeps it ahead.
Opera Neon has made browsing feel like a partnership, not a chore. It’s intelligent, proactive, and builds what I imagine.