7 min read
7 min read

Opera Neon is more than just a web browser; it’s your new digital assistant. Designed with built-in AI agents, users can assign tasks like coding, shopping, or building websites with simple prompts.
Neon stands out because of its “agentic” design: instead of just suggesting or completing one action, it can understand your goals and continue working in the background. It’s a browser built for productivity, even when you’re away.

Opera calls Neon an “agentic browser” because it does more than respond to clicks. It understands intent and acts on your behalf. Want to research a topic, book a flight, and send the confirmation to your email? Just ask.
These autonomous agents eliminate the need for constant interaction, allowing for a more passive and efficient browsing experience that turns your web goals into automated processes.

Neon’s sidebar houses three unique buttons: Chat, Do, and Make, unlocking different capabilities. Chat lets you engage with an AI assistant to ask questions or summarize web content.
Do activates Browser Operator, which handles tasks like bookings or online forms. Make allows you to create digital projects like games, websites, or reports through a text prompt. These tools are designed to replace dozens of manual steps with a single command.

Creating a website usually requires design skills and coding knowledge, but Neon simplifies the process. With a simple prompt like “make me a portfolio site for photography,” the AI understands your needs, researches components, designs a layout, and builds the site.
This is all handled in the cloud, and you can even close the browser while it works. When you return, your project is waiting, built entirely by your AI agent.

Neon stands out because it can continue tasks even when you go offline. Its AI agents live in a cloud-based virtual machine that doesn’t rely on your constant connection.
That means you can start generating a multi-page report, shut your laptop, and come back later to find it completed. This persistent automation is rarely seen in browsers, making Neon feel more like an AI workstation than a browser tab.

Whether you’re a beginner or a pro, Neon helps write, edit, and debug code. Ask for a JavaScript toggle button, a Python automation script, or an HTML layout, and it generates a working snippet instantly.
It reduces the time spent searching Stack Overflow or GitHub, and the conversational interface makes it feel like you’re pair programming with a virtual engineer who never tires or sleeps.

Browser Operator, launched in March 2025, is now a core part of Neon. This AI agent automates routine actions like filling forms, booking hotels, or comparing products.
Unlike web extensions that need access to your data, Browser Operator works locally on your browser, ensuring privacy. It reads webpage structure, clicks buttons, and even submits entries, all while you sit back and relax.

Opera emphasizes that many of Neon’s agentic features run locally on your device rather than in the cloud. This is a crucial privacy safeguard, as it limits how much user data is shared externally.
Sensitive tasks like logging into websites, filling out forms, or handling payments are processed directly in your browser. You get AI assistance without the compromise of sending personal data to unknown servers.

Neon’s Chat feature is like having a built-in, context-aware AI companion. It can explain what you’re reading, summarize articles, or give you real-time answers without switching tabs.
This streamlines research and improves focus for students, journalists, and knowledge workers. The tool turns scattered web sessions into structured productivity, like having Wikipedia, ChatGPT, and a search engine in one conversation window.

The cloud-based AI engine in Neon doesn’t just perform single tasks; it can handle complex, multi-step workflows overnight. Assign it to build a game, generate mockups, or create an entire newsletter, and it will keep working while your device rests.
This is ideal for users who want to batch-process creative or repetitive tasks. It turns downtime into output without needing your continuous supervision.

Traditional AI assistants handle one request at a time, but not Neon. Its agents can simultaneously work on multiple assignments. You can generate a website, write product descriptions, and build an app prototype in parallel, all managed in the background.
This makes it a true multitasking powerhouse and separates it from existing tools that operate in a serial, task-by-task manner.
Neon isn’t available to everyone yet. It’s in private beta, with a waitlist open for early adopters. Opera is positioning it as a premium browser, meaning some features will likely require a subscription.
However, core functionality, such as Chat and basic browsing, will remain free. Early access offers the chance to shape the platform and get ahead of what could become the next major browser trend.

Neon enters the field alongside Microsoft Copilot and OpenAI’s Operator. But unlike those tools that assist with tasks within apps, Neon is the app.
It builds websites, processes tasks, and automates workflows without needing external integration. This could make it a standalone alternative to multiple platforms, positioning it as both a browser and a productivity engine.

Opera hasn’t confirmed a release date or pricing structure for Neon. The lack of detail has created both mystery and skepticism. Some worry the browser may overpromise, like many generative AI tools.
Others are excited for the chance to help test and shape a tool that could represent a new AI category. What’s certain is that anticipation is high across the tech world.

Neon offers a glimpse into a future where we no longer click, search, and fill forms ourselves. The agentic web imagines a world where digital agents act on our behalf across sites and services.
It shifts the paradigm from passive browsing to active delegation, freeing time, reducing friction, and raising expectations for what a browser can do.
And Neon isn’t the only one redefining how we interact with the web: Meta Unveils Standalone AI To Challenge ChatGPT.

Opera Neon promises a shift from user-driven to AI-driven browsing. It’s not just about convenience, it’s about reimagining how the web fits into your day.
Instead of switching between tabs and tools, you can assign goals and return to results. If it delivers, Neon may begin a new digital assistant category that lives inside your browser and thinks like a teammate.
As browsers get smarter, platforms are tightening the reins. See how Reddit’s taking action: Reddit Cracks Down On AI Bots With Tighter Checks.
What do you think about Opera’s bold move to launch an AI tool in its browser? Please share your thoughts and drop a comment.
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Dan Mitchell has been in the computer industry for more than 25 years, getting started with computers at age 7 on an Apple II.
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