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Opera's Ex-CEO Launches Vivaldi 1.0 For Power Users 135

Opera co-founder and former CEO Jon von Tetzchner on Wednesday launched the v1.0 of Vivaldi browser. Vivaldi v1.0, which is aimed at "power users", is available to download from the company's website for Windows, OS X, and Linux platforms. The Norway, Oslo company has been working on it since 2013. Vivaldi offers a range of features such as support for Chrome extension, Tab Stacks, Rewind and Fast Forward, and built-in support for custom keyboard shortcuts and mouse gestures. There are plenty of other handy tools including the ability to check how much data a Web page has consumed in real time.
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Opera's Ex-CEO Launches Vivaldi 1.0 For Power Users

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  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2016 @09:13AM (#51852787)
    I see that Vivaldi will get an embedded email client. Why bloat a browser with an email client? The Opera email client never really fit my needs, it was too weird how it handled emails.

    .
    Since the early days of Netscape, I never saw the logic behind bundling email clients with browsers.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Zawinski's Law [catb.org]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Opera's mail client was the best RSS tool ever.

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      I already had the repository in my list so I just used apt (I have snapshot installed) and the thing's already expanded to over 140 MB.

      *sighs*

      I was cock or the walk when I had not one, but two, 40 MB drives.

    • by Hentes ( 2461350 )

      I guess they saw an opportunity with Thunderbird's future being as unsure as it is.

    • I still use Opera 12.16 as my main browser just because it is the last version that had integrated email. Maybe someday Vivaldi will live up to their long running promise of having integrated email.
  • by future assassin ( 639396 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2016 @09:24AM (#51852853)

    the Linux version and can't get pas the flat fugly GUI.

    • by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2016 @09:33AM (#51852921) Journal

      Whether we like it or not Flat and minimalism is in as gradients and skuemorphism where objects and icons look like objects are very outdated to the millennials today and the art professors who teach this stuff to students.

      Vivaldi didn't have much of a choice as this crowd would shun anything with gradients, 3d icons, and colors.

      • by aliquis ( 678370 )

        Go with the standard:
        http://www.file-extensions.org... [file-extensions.org]
        http://xwinman.org/screenshots... [xwinman.org]
        http://xwinman.org/screenshots... [xwinman.org]
        http://xwinman.org/screenshots... [xwinman.org]

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Go with the standard:
          http://www.file-extensions.org... [file-extensions.org]
          http://xwinman.org/screenshots... [xwinman.org]
          http://xwinman.org/screenshots... [xwinman.org]
          http://xwinman.org/screenshots... [xwinman.org]

          And of course, you have used the most absurd examples that you think are possible.

          "Everything Should Be Made as Simple as Possible, But Not Simpler" - Albert Einstein

          You unwittingly used examples of engineering stations and scientific applications used to process very complex data. Look at the quote above. The only thing understood today is "simple" to the exclusion of all else.

          I went through this with some SAP idiots who while dealing with very complex data insisted on putting everything behind tiny little

          • by aliquis ( 678370 )

            Absurd?
            No. The ones I know which worked just fine.

            I used MUI + MagicWB because it's an improvement over AmigaOS Workbench but still about the same. Afterstep because Next, NextStep, Steve Jobs and that it was a decent UI. I guess BeOS and OS/2 could had been thrown in too:
            http://lowendmac.com/wp-conten... [lowendmac.com]
            http://ps-2.kev009.com/michaln... [kev009.com]
            CDE because it's the standard(?) or was on Solaris machines(?), I don't know what it replaced if anything.
            FVWM is very configurable so I don't know if any of the looks are s

        • by e r ( 2847683 )
          I literally chuckled aloud when I saw those screenshots. Then I shook my head when I realized that you seem to be serious.
          That's the most hideous and dated GUI I've ever seen except, possibly, for Windows XP or Apple OS9.
      • by fnj ( 64210 )

        Whether we like it or not Flat and minimalism is in as gradients and skuemorphism where objects and icons look like objects are very outdated to the millennials today and the art professors who teach this stuff to students.

        Oh, sorry then, Professor Knuckle Under. I forgot we were supposed to gobble up every stupid fad that gets pushed on us. Please slap me twice in the face, and I will try to be a good sheep from now on.

      • by theArtificial ( 613980 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2016 @11:40AM (#51853865)
        Julie Larsen-Green [wikipedia.org] is totally a millennial. She's responsible for Metro and is in her 50s. When you start misattributing things to the youth you sound old and misinformed.
      • by KGIII ( 973947 )

        That's funny. I've been wondering what people mean when they say "flat" in reference to things like that. Now I know. I don't mind it but I do have one pet peeve with Vivaldi... Put the damned disable hardware acceleration button back!

        It was never there - but it was in the code they got and forked. It's IN Chromium and Opera. I know, 'cause I have to tick the damned thing on two separate boxes with nVidia cards and using the free drivers. I have to! Or the MENU is BLACK and I can't see it. As is the address

    • Fugly UI (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If this is where user interfaces are going we could have stopped at the Athena Widgets in 1990 and saved ourselves a lot of trouble. If they really wanted something retro they could have used that. I concur with your observation.

      • If this is where user interfaces are going we could have stopped at the Athena Widgets in 1990 and saved ourselves a lot of trouble. If they really wanted something retro they could have used that. I concur with your observation.

        +1 ( I wish I had points. )

        I get the whole minimalist thing, but as usual, it's been taken the the point of absurdity. I predict the next step will be a single white word on a white background with a barely visible graphic of a puff of smoke. That's it. And that will be after a year of "work" by a team of UX "geniuses." I happen to know most of that year is spent playing Clash of Clams and telling each other how smart they are to not actually provide any evidence of any actual effort and still get paid.

        • > I happen to know most of that year is spent playing Clash of Clams

          Smash Puss!!

          - sorry, I had to!

        • This browsers GUI is like the sun in your eye when you're driving and its leaks pas the sun visor. It distracts me from the main object which is the main browser window.

          • I installed it. There's several options and one of the default choices is fairly sane. Mostly grey, but out of the way.

        • The leather in the address book is pretty ugly and so is the book stand in pre IOS 6 for news. It can go both ways.

          What looked cool in 1990 was out of this world to show off graphics. That's great we are used to pretty now and of course people like our Mom's who didn't know how to use a computer would see a newstand and a leather for an address book to figure out what these things are for.

          This is 2016 and now it is just about information coming back with little distractions to get in the way.

          I do not like t

    • Slashdotters called Windows XP Fisher-Price and they ran in the far opposite direction. You just can't be pleased.

      Fits right in on Windows 10, anyway. Like it or not, at least it fits in. Just need a native UI for each OS.

    • by slapout ( 93640 )

      That's the same thing I said about Windows 10...

  • by jandersen ( 462034 ) on Wednesday April 06, 2016 @09:35AM (#51852935)

    Wouldn't it have been more appropriate to call it 'Wagner', then? Vivaldi is fairly light-footed and pleasant, whereas Wagner tends to sound like it was written for - and performed by - The Hulk on bad day.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah, but if you called it Wagner, after a while of using it you'd get the urge to invade Poland.

  • Browsers are extremely complex application launchers and ecosystems thanks to HTML 5, apis, and CSS 3. Even the webcam API is a whole skype like api with compression, algorithms, and other things that are difficult to implement.

    Worse, you need a large security team around the clock to fix bugs.

    Chrome is here to stay. Of course 15 years ago I said the same with IE 6. IE 6 only mattered as it will always have 90% marketshare so IE 6 CSS and quirks will be with us always ... etc. :-) ... take it back we have

  • I've been using Vivaldi for about 6 months now. This post is made via Vivaldi. One issue I've had and could not find a solution is that of unlocking my saved passwords. In Firefox, you can press a button to see your saved password, and the browser kindly asks "are you sure?". In Vivaldi you don't even have that option. I had to use the built-in inspector to alert() me my password at form submission time since it was remembered and prefilled by the browser.

    Other than that, I enjoy it. It's slightly nimbler t

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      Go here:
      chrome://settings/search#pass

      Manage passwords. It's at the bottom. Click that link. Tada!

      • Huh? Why is there a double slash? "settings" isn't a hostname!
      • by JigJag ( 2046772 )

        Thanks for your reply, it's good to know.

        That said, I'd like to know how you found that out? Even after searching on the KB, I never saw that option. If I go to Settings and type "pass" in the search box, I do NOT get what you get when going to chrome://settings/search#pass

  • "One of the things that makes Vivaldi unique is that it is built on modern web technologies. We use JavaScript and React to create the user interface..."

    Uhh.

    So basically they're writing Firefox on top of Blink instead of Gecko?

  • The comments for this type of articles always seem to follow the same pattern.

    1. There will be more critical than supportive comments. Although for Windows that's understandable.

    2. Approximately 200 ACs could have done it better although they never seem to announce when their product will be ready.

    Disclaimer: actually posted using Vivaldi but I'm not really a fanatic user of any browser, having 4 installed on the machine I'm currently using.

    • I have actually been playing with developing a webkit based browser for about 4 years now. No it will never be released, probably never finished, it's far from a feature rich browser, but has the basic plug-ins, scripting, and cookies controls and is about as usable as IE neither of which I would use regularly. A couple of the libraries I designed for it are in other things and I've used it to test ideas for other projects.

      I wouldn't be surprised if the 200 AC you're talking about have a couple projects jus

  • This reminds me of the Avant browser of some 10-15 years ago. That was basically an embedded IE frame with a super clunky custom UI around it. Sure, it enabled tabbed browsing and some other nifty things to IE at the time, but the overall user experience was clunky as fuck.

    The same is true of Vivaldi. It is just another Webkit based browser (think Chrome, Opera, and Safari), but with yet another clunky UI surrounding it. The browser may support some cool new experimental features, but the rendering pipeline

    • The UI is actually built on HTML, Javascript, and CSS: the browser itself is actually a webpage (that you can edit), so graphics behavior when doing things like resizing won't be as snappy as native controls. The actual web page rendering is based on Blink [wikipedia.org] and V8 [wikipedia.org] (same as Chrome), which are very fast.

      Many (most?) of the "cool new experimental" features are actually old ones that had appeared in the Presto-based Opera browser before it became another Chrome flavor. Tastes vary, and browsers are close to te

  • Is Norway, Oslo the non-US format for city and state, like DD/MM/YY?

  • The reason I liked Opera was because it allowed a rich browsing experience with great degree of costumisability and control natively, without needing to install 20 shitty javascript extensions that make a browser slow and unstable. A browser written entirely in shitty js is not a replacement for Opera.

  • How do you toggle javascript on/off? How do you toggle style sheets on/off? How do you disable positioning?

    Fuck you, Vivaldi.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      See subject: You think like I do, & know how great Opera 12.x & below truly was... massively flexible + powerful. I don't want or need ANYTHING less, & if this is the case with this new browser (the guy coding it's really good imo, no questions asked, but he's probably forced by ''market pressure" or sponsorship to NOT disallow the bringer of all evil, or one of them like JAVA + FLASH too, in javascript - minus scripting, which brings more bs infestation than ANYTHING else (which you THINK they

  • Not only email, but the linux version *DEMANDS* "cups", i.e printer support. My current Gentoo setup already has Pale Moon and Opera 12.16 installed, and any dependancies they require. Installing Vivaldi would download 83,318 KiB of files, of which 43,955 KiB is actually Vivaldi. The rest would be...

    net-dns/libidn-1.30
    sys-libs/libcap-2.24-r2
    dev-libs/dbus-glib-0.102
    app-text/qpdf-5.1.1
    dev-libs/libtasn1-4.5
    dev-libs/nettle-3.2
    dev-scheme/guile-1.8.8-r1
    sys-devel/autogen-5.18.4
    net-libs/gnutls-3.3.17.1
    app-text/popp

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