What does opera use for link navigation? I just see link step/cycling in the opera documentation [1]. Is there a better paradigm than link hitting [2]? Opera always seems to have impressive hidden tricks.
Hum, I didn't discover link hinting in my very short stint with Uzbl, but I might say I prefer Opera's mode: Pressing shift and the arrow keys allows you to navigate links visually, i.e. as they appear on the page. Since this scrolls the page too (to the next link), this is faster when you have to scroll around to find the links.
It might not be faster than hitting one key per link, but it's more intuitive than the link-cycling all the other browsers do. Give it a shot, you might like it.
I didn't discover link hinting in my very short stint with Uzbl
Oh.. I figured that link hinting is the way of navigating links in uzbl, so if you did not discover that (the cheat sheet lists it!) then you really missed out. As for page scrolling, hjkl does that just fine IMHO (actually, I use AltGr+u/j/k/l because hjkl is not convenient on my keyboard layout).
One technique I use is to search to get focus on the link, and press enter.
So for instance, to follow your first link I'd type ".tut[enter]", or for your second, ".tube[enter]"
This works in Firefox too, if you dismiss the search box first.
Not really better than link hinting, but good enough that I haven't felt the need to find an extension that does it.
[1] http://www.opera.com/browser/tutorials/nomouse/ [2] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgAWfqwzxck#t=9m15s