We will be doing maintenance work on Vivaldi Translate on the 11th of May starting at 03:00 (UTC) (see the time in your time zone).
Some downtime and service disruptions may be experienced.
Thanks in advance for your patience.
Distros to avoid/recommend for Vivaldi?
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@alexzhu I can't think of a distro where Vivaldi doesn't work or where Vivaldi behaves differently. It's not only available in .deb and .rpm formats, which makes it compatible with Debian-based OS (like Ubuntu or Linux Mint) and Fedora and OpenSUSE-based OS. If you have a less mainstream OS, Vivaldi is also available as a snap, which makes it "universal."
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@npro Thank you, this write-up is very helpful!
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Now that everything is clarified.
Does just anybody else state with me that the influences you are interested in, are those of the desktop environment and not (probably not at all) coming from a Linux Distribution. As the OP is just about to make the transition from Windows to Linux, I fear that this very thread is already misleading to him.
PSE everybody who is interested, oppose the expressions “distribution” and “Desktop Environment” for as long as it takes to get Vivaldi into the context.
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Hello @alexzhu
Some Linux distributions like Ubuntu offer a Live CD/USB option that allows you to run/test Linux without installing it. You may try Linux that way first before installing it in order to make sure all hardware components are properly recognizedI hope that helps.
Regards,
Fred. -
Works well on fedora desktop. I also tried it on Manjaro but had issues. Been meaning to try with flatpak device, but haven't gotten around to it yet.
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@fredallas True, but that can be problematical. Yesterday I set about installing ZoinOS and downloaded the file. Then went to Balena Etcher (as recommended in the installation guide) to flash that to a USB stick (brand new, opened the packaging to do it), and was unable to do so: the flash started then stopped after about a minute with a W10 error message about unrecognised system or some such (presumably relating to Balena?). Tried it a couple more times but the laptop now fails to recognise or open the (empty) USB stick as my D:/ drive.
Right now !'m not sure what to do: I've written it up and my son is goint to check it with one of his tutors and college and a couple of friends whose parents are IT developers over this Bank Holiday weekend, so we'll see what comes from that. Decidedly pissed because I've spent the past 12 months building up to this!!!!
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@TravellinBob said in Distros to avoid/recommend for Vivaldi?:
the laptop now fails to recognise or open the (empty) USB stick as my D:/ drive.
Are you sure it is empty? Maybe it wrote all the stuff and you just need to boot from it, have you tried it? There are also other tools doing the same like Rufus and Ventoy (personally I use that). But I have no idea what is best for MS Windows and what "hurdles" MS Windows itself creates.
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@TravellinBob I don't believe there is anything on it. Firstly, because it's brand new, unwrapped and plugged in for the first time as step one. Second, because it's a 16Gb drive and the file is less than 5, so no way is it full. Third, because the download process is supposed to take 20-30 minutes to run and was cut after no more than 1. Fourth, because even if there were something on it, W10 is not identifying the drive: I have 4 USD ports on the laptop and whatever one I try to use I get an "Unable to locate device" warning (even if I look at the File Manager and it shows a D:/ drive is open).
After the second attempt, I deleted both the Zorin file and the Balenan tool, re-booted the lsaptop and downloaded them again, the second Zorin file from a local distributor at the Warsaw University (the first canme via mail from the Zorin HQ in Dublin) and then repeated the process. Exactly the same thing happened. So I tried Rufus but again W10 blocked even the download of that.
It's a bank holiday weekend here so I'll leave it until Monday - other family stuff taking priority - and then have another look.
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I'm on Pop! OS and Vivaldi runs without any problems.
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@alexzhu If you are to install openSUSE Leap you need to find out how long 15.6 is going to be really supported (and look for further info as well*), because I think it will be supported until just December 2025. And this wouldn't matter normally but SUSE has decided for Leap 16 to make severe changes and to be based on its -not so comprehensible for what it is- entirely new "ALP" system. In that regard you should check that your CPU is not a very old one, for example from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86-64#Microarchitecture_levels , because according to https://news.opensuse.org/2025/04/30/leap-16-enters-beta/
Leap 16.0 will no longer run on machines that do not support x86_64-v2.
Previously the info about the transition to that new "tech" was a bit cloudy and uncertain, but now it seems there is a migration path for you to upgrade later. I'm not sure how well-tested it is though and how many people use Leap actually, your friend should know better.
*I'm also not sure how many Desktop Environments it will support.
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Hello @TravellinBob
In the Win10 search bar, you can type in "Create and format hard disk partitions", and that will show you a list of drives and their partitions. From there, you may check if the USB flash drive is being recognized plus if it has some type of partitions. From there you can delete the partitions and try to format it again.
I hope that helps.
Regards,
Fred. -
@fredallas said in Distros to avoid/recommend for Vivaldi?:
Hello @TravellinBob
In the Win10 search bar, you can type in "Create and format hard disk partitions", and that will show you a list of drives and their partitions. From there, you may check if the USB flash drive is being recognized plus if it has some type of partitions. From there you can delete the partitions and try to format it again.
I hope that helps.
Regards,
Fred.It may. Do I need to have the USB flash drive plugged in when I do this?
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Update - I've installed Tumbleweed and Vivaldi is working perfectly so far, though I haven't extensively tested all the features yet.
Even the install of Linux itself was much easier (as someone without an IT/software background) than I anticipated! -
@alexzhu Nice, using TW is probably the better choice (you get newest software without the need of using "containerized" solutions and you don't have to worry about upgrading to major versions). Let your distrohoping adventure begin then
. Out of curiosity, which Desktop Environment did you go with?
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@npro Currently using KDE.