Configurable address toolbar and finer grained control on muting – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1369.6
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If I go to
https://www.telenor.no/minesider
and try to logon, I cannot do anything. The page is locked.
If I go to the same page in Edge, there is a popup about cookies - which you have to accept before you can continue. This popup is not showing up in Vivaldi.
Had the same problem in previous snapshots.Win10x64 Vx64
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@helsten2 I see the message to accept cookies.
Specs: AMD A10-6800K, 8 Gb on Win 10 64-bit build 17134.320 • Snapshot 2.2.1369.6 (64-bit)
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@pesala: Hmm, that is what I see in Edge. But not in Vivaldi...
Any idea why? Something in my settings? I noticed that (old) Opera 12.17 has the same problem, but it works in Opera 58. -
@helsten2 Have you an extension to kill EU GDPR cookies?
Sometimes, such extensions may lock the site (in such case, you should notify to their dev).
Worth checking if you're blocking something vital in adblocker/scriptblocker/cookies blocker (if you are using them)
Still get the same screen posted above on this V version.
To see the cookie screen I had to whitelisttags.tiqcdn.com
in another copy of Vivaldi (which has scriptblocker).
Even blocking third party cookies sometimes cause these issues, try to allow any of them for the site, but I'm not sure is the case. -
@hadden89: uBlock Origin caused the problem...
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[Sync] Converting more settings to syncable types (VB-45835)
I'm curious, could someone please specify which settings were added to sync?
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Configurable toolbar? Yes and no. But getting better. The ability to remove buttons is a major step forward.
How about having the option to rearrange buttons?FWIW, I like this update. That is one long changelog. I'd say Vivaldi is moving forward.
By the way...Thanks for this great update. Wow! What a changelog! -
How about adding the "In Progress" tag to https://forum.vivaldi.net/topic/24119/configurable-toolbar
edit: Suggestion taken from @LonM See https://forum.vivaldi.net/post/253033
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@nekomajin Just sayin', I was using only stable in the past but after 2.0 the snapshot performs so great that it became my new stable
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@npro Clarity needed. Are you using snapshots as your main/default browser?
Snapshots are not considered as "stable". Snapshots are snapshots. Stable(s) are stable.
That said, many users use snapshots as their default browser. Me? I setup snapshots as a standalone. -
@para-noid I'm one of those always on snapshot, for me doesn't make any difference if its tagged "stable" or "snapshot", I only care having the latest fixes
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@fangsta I have this very same issue under win 10 64-bit. It made browsing impossible, I had to switch back to the previous snapshot.
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First of all, sync seems to work better. Second, mouse gestures are more stable - no crash until now (I may have to wait a little longer to confirm). But I noticed that when I use the wheel scroll to change tabs WITH the "show tab cycler" UNCHECKED I always end up to the destination tab with the right click menu activated and shown at cursor point. This - unwanted - behavior is not taking place with the tab cycler checked. Can someone confirm that?
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very nice!!!
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@luetage said in Configurable address toolbar and finer grained control on muting – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1369.6:
Vivaldi has been the most customisable browser out there right from its release
that's a blatant lie and everyone knowing browsers market knows this
@lonm said in Configurable address toolbar and finer grained control on muting – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1369.6:
They are supposed to be for merging branches as they are done
but this one isn't done yet
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@ian-coog The wording used by @npro isn't very clear. That's all. I take it that @npro uses the snapshot as his everyday browser. The wording of (quote) " snapshot performs so great that it became my new stable " isn't clear. I think they mean that the "snapshot performs so well it has become their default/go-to browser."
Sorry. But I'm a stickler for clarity.
I know sometimes I'm not super clear. I do my best to be super clear. -
@zakius said in Configurable address toolbar and finer grained control on muting – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1369.6:
that's a blatant lie
You say that because you do not know what luetage knows. He is the man to ask when it comes to modifying the browser.
Though it is true to say that advanced modifications are still not available to the average new user, the ability has been there from the start because of the way that Vivaldi is built.
I use a few customisations provided by various users who frequent the Modding Forum.
- I made my Start Page thumbnails and folders transparent
- I hid the navigation bar in the start page
- I moved the Show/Hide panels button to the right because my panels are on the right
These are simple things. Much more is possible.
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@zakius said in Configurable address toolbar and finer grained control on muting – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1369.6:
@luetage said in Configurable address toolbar and finer grained control on muting – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1369.6:
Vivaldi has been the most customisable browser out there right from its release
that's a blatant lie and everyone knowing browsers market knows this
First, you are reminded that the first rules of this forum are to show other users respect and to be courteous. Calling a user a liar is not in keeping with that primary rule. Don't do it again.
Second, I invite you to direct me to any browser alive today other than Vivaldi, that (without extensions) allows a user to put tabs top, bottom, left, right, show or not show the tab bar, put address bar top or bottom, side panel to left or right, show or not show the address bar, status bar, side panel; has web panels, has integrated notes, built-in screen grabber that allows an area to be selected or captures scrollable page, lets you turn unread tab indicators or sound icons or tab title notifications on and off, lets you use any custom image on speed dials or for speed dial background, lets you have multiple speed dial pages, select what data is and is not synced, even has quick commands, lets you customize mouse gestures, customize keyboard shortcuts, pick your start page(s), make pinned tabs invulnerable or closable, show or not show tab thumbs and tab previews, has a visual tab cycler (or not depending on how you set it), gives you the choice of tooltips or statusbar appearance, use or not use native window, change the color of every UI element to any one of 16 million colors, use or not use site highlight colors on tabs or browser elements, zoom either the page or the interface itself, or both, adjust the UI contrast, use or not use any background image of your choice in the UI, change the browser menu style; change the tab-switching orders and methods, pick the content of any new tab, specify individual widths for web panels, even has web panels, change panel to fixed or floating, stack and tile tabs, make your tabs transparent or not, has a window panel, customize the behavior of your address bar, show or not show a search bar (in address bar or speed dial), show icons only or labels only on the bookmarks bar, etc., etc., etc.
Arguably, any browser that lacks the inbuilt options of Vivaldi is less customizable. Hence, @luetage is not lying. If other browsers have the options you want, and Vivaldi does not, you should use those other browsers rather than spending time and screen real estate slagging off Vivaldi. Yes?
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@Pesala @ayespy first of all @luetage never said without extensions (additionally while I also think that some features should be supported natively having poor native implementation is always worse than a proper extension, like mouse gestures for example), secondly said "from its release" so quite a long time ago when Firefox was still alive making extensions much more powerful than currently (or in V), but even without extensions there were ways of injecting own JS into Firefox' chrome (I'm not 100% sure about this one though), restyling it or completely rebuilding XUL so... sorry but even if it wasn't intentional lie that statement wasn't true
Maybe I was too harsh in this comment, I admit, but I got used to people spouting every kind of utter nonsense just to cover up for their products (or products their use) shortcomings, and to make it even worse it's a common behavior on this forum (and even in the official blog posts) and it's one of the things I can't stand the most
And that's also why I am highlighting these nonsenses when I stumble upon them. I understand that making an advanced and high quality piece of software takes time and I have nothing against spending as much time as is needed on that, but if I see early alpha reaching 2.0 milestone something is absolutely not right. If I see a beautiful manifest that was meant to guide the development but then the same people are proudly presenting unfinished features and calling them perfect it's just sad