Win a trip to meet Vivaldi in Oslo
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Enter the Vivaldi community competition to win a trip to Oslo and meet our team!
Click here to see the full blog post
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Here I use Tab Tiling to display (from left to right) my maths homework, the LaTeX file and my maths book. This way I can see everything at a glance, whereas I had to switch tabs in any other browser. It truly, greatly improves my workflow. -
Traduction FR de cette news sur http://vivaldi-fr.com/blog/gagnez-un-voyage-a-oslo-et-rencontrez-lequipe-vivaldi/, enjoy et good luck !
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Whoa.Good luck to all who will join on that event!
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@admm: Please wait before posting so soon
https://github.com/libccy/vivaldi-tweak -
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Everything I do now is controlled with mouse gestures and keyboard commands thanks to Vivaldi. With that and Tab scrolling with the mouse wheel, I am unstoppable.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nh8bUKY4x5N83KJO9ObjRR-89648OEkc/view?usp=sharing -
I love the speed at which the browser work I went from Chrome to Vivaldi on all my PC even my work PC. The note taking app and the window function are great adds -on. Thank you very much for a great job. Happy holidays to the team!
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We have the luck of living in the time of the commercial space race. Once again humanity is shooting for the moon and beyond (i.e. Mars).
With a launch cadence of about once every other week, SpaceX broadcasts these events live on the web and even mounts cameras directly on the stages which can be followed during both launch and landing.
During a launch party there are many sources of interest to follow and each of them provides different footage and information. For example, last launch (at the time of writing this was CRS-13, the 13th Cargo Resupply Mission to the ISS by SpaceX), I wanted to follow:
- Two SpaceX webcasts (hosted and technical)
- Hosted stream by Tim Dodd, the everyday astronaut.
- NASA live stream
- Stream of the CRS-13 launch thread on www.reddit.com/r/spacex
With the tiling features of Vivaldi, multiple sources can be seamlessly integrated to easily follow them simultaneously. Below are some pictures.
Vivaldi helps me to bring space into my livingroom.
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Vivaldi is my browser of choice since the old Opera 12 had been abandoned. I will not talk here about the many things Vivaldi is doing great, after all because of these great features I chose this browser over all the others. Instead I will talk about the ways I customized it to meet the one feature I can't live without:
Dark pages instead of white! Because white pages hurt my eyes so bad! I will never use a browser that cannot change the white background to something less offensive.
Right now, the only Chrome extension I found able to do this with a certain degree of flexibility is Stylish. On it I loaded a style called "Solarized Dark Modified Colors" that I modified once again to meet my needs.
I am well aware that the vast majority of webpages are built with a white background in mind and once this white is replaced with something dark, certain elements become hard to read, but even so, for me the dark background is essential. I believe I am not alone.Why not integrate a feature in Vivaldi to interfere with the way the webpages are displayed? The "Themes" feature in Vivaldi is great, but why stop at the borders of the browser? What if you will implement something like Stylish, giving users the choice to set their own background color, text color, unvisited links, visited links, title and perhaps some other webpages elements colors? Then give users a quick way to switch between these Themes, in case some elements of webpages become hard to read.
Here are some screenshots of the way I prefer to see the web with Vivaldi:
You did an awesome job with Vivaldi and I hope to see it become the ultimate web browser!
Tyr Antilles
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As several people here, I used to be a die-hard Opera fan, until they became Chromium-based. As a power user, I never managed to adapt well to the scarce customisation options and very few features (apart from those added by extensions) of the typical browsers that go around. So when I found out about Vivaldi I grew excited, and when after a few updates it became clear that the developers were doing an excellent job in adding power-user features, I became a huge fan (and evangelist ;-)). With every update, niftier things are added and my UX becomes better and better!
What I personally appreciate the most, are the recently introduced Window Manager and the Tab Stacking features. As a Proyect and Development manager, I have to keep track of numerous Jira tickets and thanks to those two features, I can organize my tickets by customers and easily get around among my >30 open tabs. Other much appreciated features are the tab tiling, mouse gestures and the synchronization features (finally! :-)).
Keep up the good work and thanks for your tireless efforts so far!
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I've left my entry here:
https://srart.vivaldi.net/2017/12/23/what-do-i-use-vivaldi-for/The big takeaway is that everything is great, but the history is epic!
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@uccha Please either post in English, or post in the Japanese local forum. Further, this topic is not the proper location to report problems.
英語で投稿するか、日本のローカルフォーラムに投稿してください。さらに、このトピックは問題を報告する適切な場所ではありません。
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TABS, ALL THE TABS, ENOUGH TABS TO TAKE UP 12GB OF RAM, TABS (my personal record is 98, this screenshot has 58) TABS TABS TABS TABS TABS TABS!
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Thank you for your browser! It's one of the best browser since Opera12!
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Hallo og God Jul Vivaldi team!
[url=https://postimg.org/image/nivomtf63/][img]https://s9.postimg.org/i7gs23t3j/Screen_Shot_2017-12-25_at_02.37.18.png[/img][/url]
I use your beautiful browser for purely recreational purposes, as I like to keep work separate in Safari (so I can quickly alt-tab between work & play) no hard feelings! In short, Vivaldi means happy, colourful fun to me! I've also gotta have those keyboard shortcuts & cannot live without a backspace function.
That said, if you could alter the web panels to adhere to the rest of the gorgeous colour schemes, in the new year, that would make me love it even more & even consider combining work & play.
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This (UI-less with keyboard shortcuts to do everything, plus command line to switch to the right tab or search or go to an address):
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@cqoicebordel One question: how?
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There are countless reasons Vivaldi is my browser of choice. As someone else said, it perfectly filled the void left by the "betrayal" of Opera when they switched to what I call Chromepera.
But as time went on Vivaldi became much more than a rebound, and I discovered some unique functions I can't live without, now.
I love the degree of UI customization Vivaldi offers, mainly about WHERE and IF to position any bar, from tabs, to the address bar, sidebar, etc. But that's a given.
I love the the degree of behaviour customization Vivaldi offers, like for example the possibility to define how to cycle between tabs and what tab to open after you close the currently opened one.
I love tile stacking and group renaming when I do researches from work and need to group different sources together.
I love the session feature, and use it daily to open my morning routine of newspapers and comics, and to save for later some search.But if I have to pick only one feature that I really couldn't live without, it would be the F2 command line + integration with bookmarks nicknames + UI-less mode.
Ok, it's three features, but they really synergy together.I need no UI, and access to my most used bookmarks (or search engines) has never been quicker.
Need to open gmail? F2 -> type gm -> it's already opened.
Need to open facebook? -> F2 + fb.
Watch later list from youtube? F2 + wl.
Search "something" on youtube? F2 -> y something.
Need to check how to write synergy in the sentence above? F2 -> wrie sinergia -> I land on WordReference page to translate from italian to english the word "sinergia" (WRIE = Word Reference Italian to English, I choose this shortcut since it's easy to remember).
Some say Vivaldi is a little slower. I say that even if it was true it doesn't matter when you can do everything so quickly instead of having to click 6 different buttons or having to deal with some inconsistent address bar behaviour, and Vivaldi with all the interface customization is king!