How to switch from Google Chrome to Vivaldi browser
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Switching from Chrome to Vivaldi is quick, easy, and fun because you’re moving from a boring default option to a fast, flexible, and feature-rich browser. Follow the steps with Vivaldi’s Johannes Dolven.
Click here to see the full blog post
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Ha! I’d never switch from Chrome to Vivaldi!
coz I’d never use Chrome in the first place
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@potmeklecbohdan @guigirl Chrome? What's that??
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alt+tab
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@Stardust Isn't that presumed you have V and the other thing installed on your machine?
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@hlehyaric yes, you are correct!
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@Stardust Appallingly frightening…
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The only plus of Chrome is that it can download Vivaldi
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After using vivaldi for quite a time, now every other browser seems inefficient. Right from the UI to every other feature, vivaldi nails it with perfection!
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I want voice search, work for a day on Vivaldi then quit, only works on Chrome.
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If Chrome was the only thing you knew, have you ever tried about:flags in the browser?
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@stardust: THANKS. i love quick and easy answers like that, you saved lots of time for me.
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No!!! It's not quick migrate from chrome to Vivaldi when you cannot import the extensions from chrome. And it's not fun install manually all extensions from one browser in another.
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This year I switched from my old browser (always had refused Chrome) to Vivaldi, ain't going back to that browser for sure.
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@marioporfirio ANY Chrome extension which interacts with or modifies the UI stands the chance of a hard/irrecoverable crash in Vivaldi due to the incompatibility of UI code between the two browsers. Vivaldi could not do what it does if it used the restrictive Chrome UI code. For this reason, and for the sake of economical resource usage (every extension launches a new processor thread), it only makes sense to migrate from Chrome to Vivaldi with no extensions, find out what Vivaldi does (dozens of things) without NEEDING an extension, and then install only the needed and compatible extensions.
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@joccol That's because it's a pay-for Chrome service. Vivaldi can't pay for it.
Still, the developers of Vivaldi, back in the day when they were building the original versions of Opera, did come up with their own voice solutions. It could happen again.
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