Opera’s agentic browser now allows users to connect AI tools directly to live browsing sessions. This enables users to access tabs, interact with pages, and perform actions in real-time. Here are the details.

What is MCP?

MCP, or Model Context Protocol, is an open standard developed by Anthropic and later donated to the Linux Foundation’s Agentic AI Foundation. This foundation was established at the end of last year.

In short, MCP is a universal standard that connects AI models with external systems. As more companies adopt it, integrating AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and of course Claude into applications and services such as Notion, Google Drive, Slack, GitHub, and Zapier has become possible. This allows LLMs to access data and perform actions on these platforms.

Of course, there are more technical aspects to the adoption and implementation of MCP, but briefly, as more platforms strive to adopt it, more users can achieve integration and benefit from this situation.

MCP Support in Opera Neon

As 9to5Mac readers may know, Opera Neon is Opera’s subscription-based agentic browser. Released last year, this browser includes native agentic tools, which include:

  • Tasks: Self-sufficient workspaces that understand context and allow AI to analyze, compare, and take action on multiple sources.
  • Cards: A feature that allows users to save frequently used commands and facilitates repetitive browsing tasks.
  • Do: Neon’s agentic browsing feature that navigates on behalf of the user.
  • Create: A useful tool that creates widgets, self-sufficient applications, and reports based on information provided by the user or the result of a web search.

Since then, the browser has received several nice improvements, such as deep research, Gemini 3 Pro integration, and more.

Today, by adding MCP support, Opera Neon allows AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, Lovable, n8n, and even OpenClaw to access tabs, interact with pages, and perform actions on behalf of the user.

Depending on the user’s workflow, this can significantly increase efficiency by reducing context switching. AI tools can pull information from open tabs, update documents, trigger automations, and complete multi-step tasks without any manual input from the user at every step.

Of course, these gains will be more immediately felt by users who are already comfortable with MCP-compliant tools. However, today’s news could also serve as a starting point for those looking to explore these workflows in Opera Neon.

To learn more about Opera Neon, you can follow this link.

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