![]() Vivaldi has been my default browser for many years. Built-in email is planned, but mail is limited to web mail at the moment.” It already has Panels, Tab-stacking, Notes, Speed Dial, and Customisable shortcuts and Tabs. It uses the Chromium rendering engine like the new Opera 38. This initial release is a Technical Preview, it is neither feature complete, nor free from bugs that might spoil your day. ![]() ![]() Vivaldi's name does not exactly roll off the tongue, but so far, they got an excellent thing going here.“The former CEO of Opera, Jon von Tetzchner, has released the Vivaldi Browser for fans of the old Opera. People tend to love what they love for a long time. Vivaldi enters a crowded and vocal browser market. This feature is great for anyone having difficulty reading a web page or for fun. You can go nuts between those two features, changing how a page renders 15 different ways, from filters, including grayscale and intensify, to 3D to fonts. On a web page, you’re having difficulty reading? Just slide the bar to zoom in or out and reset. You can look at the bottom, and you will find the option to show or hide images and display only cached images to speed up browsing. Towards the bottom left, just above the status bar, the options gear icon would make more sense if brought up to the top right or even the sidebar where people would look for it first. It has a little sidebar with quick links to bookmarks, mail (not available yet), downloads, contacts, and notes. ![]() New tabs are opened with the simple + tab and close with the X tab. You have forward, back, refresh, and home keys next to the address bar by default. It has an interface similar to Google Chrome. Vivaldi is a free web browser from the original Opera Web Browser founders in 1994, designed for Windows and Linux. ![]()
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