Vivaldi has all the features you'd expect from a modern browser and more. Set up shortcut keys for everything. Create Command Chains to operate complex sequences with a click. Translate snippets of text instantly. Use the Capture Tool to snag selections or entire pages in a flash. Organize an unlimited number of tabs into a variety of tab stack options. The choice is yours!
Right now, the browser is only a technical preview, but there are big plans for Vivaldi in the future. In the coming months, there are plans to add sync, mail support, better performance and extensions. Tatsuki also said that Vivaldi will be shaped by the community for the most part, so the feature set will be guided by user demand.
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It is a more-than-ok alternative to other browsers. Von Tetzchner saw this browser as an opportunity to launch a browser that could do a job that Opera never did: He wanted to bring back the love that the internet felt for the Opera browser, to say it on a sweeter note.
Somehow starting the same way as the Chrome giant, Vivaldi supports the same extensions set, but the central fact is that it brings to the table a fresh set of enhanced features. Among them is the speed of running the pages (no matter the speed of the connection to the internet), a warm look, customizable user experience, sync, floating web panels, speed dial for favorites, notes, downloads, previewed tabs or Chrome extensions. By the way, the browser does an impeccable job of importing bookmarks from other browsers.
As soon as you open the browser, you will be welcomed by a warm color palette and structure. Forged from Chromium (an open-source browser project), the team of developers behind Vivaldi made sure that the new browser has a unique vibe attached to it, with the similarities hidden deep.
Another fun tip to follow is to hold Ctrl (on Windows) or Cmd (on Mac), click on the tabs you want to open, right-click on any of them, then select the tile tabs function. It will grant you the viewing of multiple tabs at once. These actions stand for the side-by-side displaying, another feature of the browser.
Vivaldi Technologies, the company behind the innovative and feature-rich Chromium-based Vivaldi browser for Desktop, today introduced a first version of their long awaited mobile app. Vivaldi Mobile browser is now available on the Google Play store.
A collapsible side panel that houses extra features (just like old Opera) including a (not yet working) mail client, contacts, bookmarks browser and note taking section that lets you take and annotate screenshots.
A bunch of other features are on offer too, including customizable keyboard shortcuts, a tabs bar that can be set on any edge of the browser (or hidden entirely), privacy options and a speed dial with folders.
The Web browser is likely the most important piece of software on your hardware, whatever that hardware may be. In fact, whenever a new bit of hardware arrives that somehow lacks a way to browse the Web, invariably one of the first things enthusiasts will do is figure out a way to run a browser on it.
But this uniformity is its own choice, the result of a particular approach to software development. The prevailing wisdom of the moment is that Web browsers should be like children of the Victorian Age: seen and not heard. Or, maybe more specifically in the case of browsers, neither seen nor heard.
But if you'd like to go beyond the vanilla browsing experience offered by the big-name browser makers, if you'd like to customize your browser in myriad ways, and if you'd like to have more control over your browsing experience, Vivaldi 2.0 is well worth trying.
Syncing data is no small undertaking since it requires a server-side component as well as the in-browser UI. Because of its focus on data privacy, Vivaldi opted to build its own sync tools, and the company did so in such a way that your data is encrypted end-to-end (provided you set a password, which you should). Vivaldi stores, but has no way to read, your data. It isn't sending any data to third-party servers at all; everything is in-house.
In the meantime, there are quite a few other improvements in Vivaldi 2.0 that make it an even more powerful tool than before. One feature that I haven't seen Vivaldi tout much is how much faster Vivaldi 2.0 is than it was back in the 1.0 days. According to von Tetzchner, some of the speed boost is a result of Chromium improvements, and some of it is related to a significant Chromium change that came along last year, which forced Vivaldi's engineers to refactor a considerable amount of code, speeding up the browser in the process.
After the sync and speed improvements, Vivaldi 2.0's feature list becomes a browser tinkerer's wonderland. Vivaldi's MO has always been to continually refine and fine-tune existing features, and this release is no exception. There are so many new options, added little features, and tweaks that it's tough to know where to start. I highly recommend checking out the Vivaldi blog for more details and the complete list of everything that's new in 2.0.
My favorite feature in this release is in Vivaldi's Tab Tiling feature. Perhaps one of Vivaldi's most innovative features, tab tiling allows you to view several tabs in a single window that's split into little subwindows (nerds: think tmux in your browser). As someone who does a tremendous amount of online research, especially comparing things, this feature is what made Vivaldi my default browser years ago. I can't imagine browsing the Web without it.
When I try to share my screen on a web-based application (I tried Zoom and MS Teams so far) this is what happens with Vivaldi browser (the one I use the most).
(I have enabled the WebRTC (experimental) flag in all of my Chromium-based browsers).
I'm rather referring to the window preview you get when hovering. This might plain be due to the older libs vivaldi is linked against, that can be a bit of a problem using proprietary binary blobs on a rolling release. FWIW chromium sharing works just fine here. What do you get from
As I understood from other topics relating this issue, the problem starts with the updates from Chrome (chromium), I have checked it, once you downgrade to a pre v90 version of Chrome everything works. Opera still works and Vivaldi browser also due to the fact they still use older versions of chromium.
I just tested with latest Chrome 94 with
meet.jit.si screen hare works.
Are you using your own deployment or
meet.jit.si?
Can you post more details version of jitsi in case you are using your own deployment.
Test with
meet.jit.si on your device with chrome version you have.
If you are running old Version of jitsi it could be due to dropping of old Plan B , though I ama not sure if chrome 94 has dropped it or not yet.
I want to know if there is any way we can join the meeting automatically when the host starts the meet. In meet links like shown below, we have to reload the page continuously until the host doesn't start the meet.
If you use a Chromium based browser(eg Brave, Vivaldi, Google Chrome), use Google Meet Enhancement Suite in combination with an autorefresh extension.There are some problems with it- you can get a page where it won't automatically reload, but works fine otherwise.
Atle is a designer by trade and maker by heart. Living in Nesodden, Norway. Currently, leading design efforts at Vivaldi Technologies, building a web browser, an e-mail client, and a calendar that truly adapts to people's needs.
Besides my tasks, there's usually at least one meeting per day, either with my other product-designer colleague, or other teams I'm involved with. We discuss everything from bugs, new features, user feedback to upcoming releases and general product planning. As well as totally random, fun thing, of course. The company is pretty distributed, so these discussions typically happen on Whereby, but every now and then we meet up in the offices, which is always fun.
So where I am now, we are heavily involved with the people using our product, and a lot of the ideas and inspiration come from talking directly to those using the browser. There's our community with blogs and feedback, threads on Twitter, Reddit, etc.
Having worked at Vivaldi for 8 years now, I'm obviously very happy with the work I'm doing there. The desktop browser has been my biggest focus, but in the last few years I've also worked on the Android version, and just recently started work on the coming iOS version. Being a small team can be challenging, but it also lets you get hands-on with a lot of different things. I enjoy having a lot of impact on what I do, and that's definitely the case here. Before I joined Vivaldi, I had no idea how complex a web browser could be.
- "It's just an address field and a few navigation buttons, how hard could it be?"
This could not be further from the truth.
If you then add in a full email client and a calendar to the mix, things get exponentially insane. Despite all this, and my ignorance at the start, I'm very proud of what we have achieved so far, and there's so much more to come!
(1) Opera-style menu refers to a navigation menu which shows or hides when you click anywhere on the left edge of the application window. It must have been introduced by the original Opera browser. It exists to this day by means of various add-ons for Mozilla and I think it is native to the Vivaldi browser;
No operating system should come with an integrated browser or be built to depend on one. A preinstalled one would be acceptable as long as it could be easily uninstalled later or optioned out during install.
I, too, am a staunch Firefox user and have made good use of About:config to tweak it the way I want it to perform. Not really a fan of Chrome (Google comes in there somewhere) but I am a Gmail user. IE gets used for accessing the work portal, others work but not as well as IE although Safari works great on IPad. I also agree that no browser should come installed OS or otherwise.
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