Vivaldi introduces a full-page Notes Manager and configurable menus to its browser for computers
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Is a new version with political opinion?
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@bongyi Vivaldi has nothing to do with politics. Nothing.
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@Ayespy Nothing in bold.
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@Ayespy I think bongyi is referring to the image at the top of the Blog article
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Unfortunately, Note Manager does not support RTL languages.
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@saeebs Please see How to Report a Bug
This link is now on the Help menu, Report a Bug.
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@Pesala said:
This link is now on the Help menu, Report a Bug
Maybe you should add ‘by default’ to your note now?
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@sjudenim said in Vivaldi introduces a full-page Notes Manager and configurable menus to its browser for computers:
and I just realized that there is an instant crash when I close the Developer Tools from that page. Reproducible every time
Workaround is to close the page/window before closing devtools (they close automatically).
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Is there any other way to access Notes Manager rather than through the Start Page? I do not use the Vivaldi Start Page. I have a 3rd party start page set up, so as far as I can tell, there is no way for me to use this?
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@donnacavalier You can:
- go to
vivaldi://notes
- right-click a note (in the tree) in the notes panel, select open in editor
- double-click a note (again in the notes panel tree) if it doesn’t have a URL associated
- go to
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Maybe this was already mentioned in the five pages of comments on here, but I think the "what's new" page definitely needs to give a better hint how you see the full-page notes or edit the menus!
The images are too small to see exactly what's going on and I ended up on some review page (not at Vivaldi) to find out that menu editing happens at the bottom of the appearance settings...
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@donnacavalier said in Vivaldi introduces a full-page Notes Manager and configurable menus to its browser for computers:
Is there any other way to access Notes Manager rather than through the Start Page? I do not use the Vivaldi Start Page. I have a 3rd party start page set up, so as far as I can tell, there is no way for me to use this?
I agree - it's weird that you have menu options under "tools" for bookmarks and history but not notes!
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@pesala: Absolutely yes. Unfortunately the blog article about Martin L. King at the top is a political standing actually connecting to BLM.
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@Pesala The image references current events.
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@ayespy: I think is out of the competencies of a browser developer company. Do you agree with me?
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@bongyi I think you're making a mountain out of a molehill. The picture should cause no offence. It is an important part of history, and a current hot news topic.
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@Pesala Agree. But nowadays it's always a risk to put any kind of "out of context" news in a post blog.
Is usually safer to use animal pictures.
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@Hadden89 Animal pictures, landscapes and still life canvases. It is of course, never safe to acknowledge that anything is happening in the world. Where I live, mentions of the very real and catastrophic pandemic we have all been facing receive virulent and vitriolic cries of "hoax!" "fascism!" and "my rights!" Life is, apparently, politics.
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I think that the image on the blog (from Wikipedia) does not advocate a certain political orientation, but an historical event related to human rights. I think this is what everyone should take as their own, regardless of their political or religious orientation.
A declaration against xenophobia and hatred has and should also be supported by Vivaldi, without raising suspicions of the affiliation of a certain political party.
The declaration of human rights was signed by most countries of the world (except the Vatican and some others)