No time to rest. Vivaldi 1.1 is here with enhanced tab handling, better hibernation and more!
-
I'm posting this using Firefox, rather than Vivaldi, because you broke Vivaldi for my system at work. Got the update notice at home. Installed. At work "apt-get" was saying "kept back," so I purged the "-beta" left-overs, removed "-stable" and tried to reinstall. Won't reinstall because it needs "libstdc++6 (>= 4.8.0)", but my Linux Mint MATE 13 (Maya) system has v4.6.3.
So: No more Vivaldi eval for me, I guess.
Jim
-
Thanks for new tab options!
All i want now is this 4 things:
1. better speed of opening new window (like when i open new tab)
2. more reliable session manager (which can remember my windows order and position and which opens in new windows if i have more than 1 window in session),
3. close tabs to the right option.
4. ability to assign ctrl+numbers shortcuts to my speed dial tiles.
Vivaldi is best browser for me since Opera 12. Thanks a lot. -
Yes to the new tab thing. The ability to open something from the address bar in a new background tab is the single small function I miss the most in Vivaldi.
Overall though I'm loving it and have been using it as my default browser for some time. Thanks!
-
It is supposed to work like that, pafflick. As I understand it, Vivaldi currently offers two different release streams. There's the stable one (that went from 1.0 final to 1.1 final) and the dev stream (that only offers unstable builds like Snapshots and Release Candidates in between, like 1.0 RC to Snapshot 1.1, to 1.1 RC and in the future to, I assume, Snapshot 1.2 once one of those will be out).
At present there doesn't seem to be any visual distinction between those two update/release streams, so you need to take a look at your version number and check for yourself if that's a stable or unstable build.
-
Why Vivaldi is hibernating pinned tabs?
-
Confirmed
OS X 10.11.4 -
Thanks for another stable version, guys and girls at Vivaldi. The one thing I like best about it is your versioning philosophy, as strange as that sounds. Chrome and Firefox are just being ridiculous now with their scheduled updates, that often contain security fixes or the kind of update that is minor in scope or utility.
I'm looking forward to some more tab-bar enhancements. What you've done now is very helpful in reducing extra click-work and some of those features are as helpful if not more so than I remember the old Opera being in the past. Now the only thing I'm missing is a proper tab-bar that can not only handle but also display a larger number of tabs the right way, say in a multi-row or scrollable manner.
Oh and just for completeness sake, I'd also like a way to switch between release streams, so I don't need to manually download a snapshot when I'm on the developer's stream or a stable version when I'm running a snapshot/release candidate. I really like you guys, but I'm not in the habit of checking this blog daily and will often miss the latest updates this way.
-
Touch screen actions not working is a major pain in the ***
I really hope this will get fixed soon, I already switched back to Chrome because of it -
Thank you for answer. I am little bit confused. So i understand that now without "experimental" mark it is already tested and can be used normally like x32 version?
-
" millions of downloads followed all over the world". Can you share with us official stats? We want to know how many we are. I installed stable version in my every friends :-). I want to know is you project getting popular or not.
-
Hello
I cannot scroll with my scroll wheel on Vivaldi 1.1. I had the same problem with the beta version but thought it would be fixed by the release. It still does not work. Vivaldi does not respond to my scroll wheel and also does not respond to my touchpad scrolling. Version 1.0 does work. Anyone else facing this issue? I was suspecting a driver issue (weird) but Firefox and chrome work. My system is windows 10 64 bit. -
I did a force-install as per a comment in the Linux forum and got it back.
Now if I could only find a way to get this site to stop flooding my inbox with notifications… sigh...
-
OK, I thought that the dev version offers every single snapshot released (whether it is "stable" or "dev") as an automatic update, thanks for clarifying that…
-
The usernames for web passwords are displayed in the SETTINGS/PRIVACY tab "in the clear".
Do other browsers openly display access of the usernames of stored saved passwords in the same way?I have utilities to save my passwords. For most, my grey matter can store and recall them easily.
**I do not want a guest browsing in my Vivaldi to see the access username for my IP cam, and so on.
**to get there: I toggle the slide switch for side bar to SETTINGS wheel, then PRIVACY tab, and midway down, "PASSWORDS". I realize only the username is shown but even that display is insecure.
I had sent a bug report based on bad behavior of one site and the latest update restored and corrected the bugs I had found.
I like Vivaldi.
-
Great Work. Keep it up the good work:D
-
Excellent browser
-
Congratulations to release 1.1. I very much appreciate your work.
(Though I'm still a bit longer on "hold-out" until M3 arrives.)
-
I can do it with
.tab-position .tab .close {order:-1 !important;}
.tab-position .tab:hover.tab:not(.button-off) .favicon{display:none}I'm fine using custom CSS files, but it's rather finicky having to keep it up to date every time the browser is updated. I would hope one day internal UI customization would include more options to this effect.
-
So, how does one upgrade from 32-bit Vivaldi to 64-bit Vivaldi on Windows 10? I don't see any link for 64-bit for this version 1.1. Wonderful browser! (This from an Opera user since Opera v.6.)
-
I am about to try 1.1. The version 1 release is the only one that has stuck for me so far, at least I haven't found a reason to stop using it yet. Before that, I kept wanting to use Vivaldi as my primary browser, because I love the concept. I love that it is Chromium based and has lots of settings. I would just stick to Chrome, but they hate settings for some reason. Before now I would try new versions of Vivaldi occasionally, use them for a little while, run into too many bugs, and get sick of the bugs.