What do I use Vivaldi for

The most useful things I find that Vivaldi does, and the main reasons I use it are the multiple speed dials, the built in notes, and the stacking tabs.

Multiple speed dial pages make keeping track of the things that I do at work much easier.  I have four projects  that require a large set of docs, resources, and links.  Along with that I have my general work links (things like vacation, time sheets and ticketing systems).  Of course I also have non work things in the default speed dial.

 

The built in notes contain all of the things that I have learned over the years, sets of commands that are too long to type for the amount of times that I use them or that are too complex for me to remember.  For six years I’ve been collecting these notes, and I back them up, and email them to myself, store in cloud servers, and now with Vivaldi, I can finally sync them.

 

Lastly the stacking of tabs.  Best research assistant ever.  Collect everything related to a new subject together, stack the tab, and maybe tile it to reference concepts from other pages.

 

Up to this point, everything has been either something we saw in the old Opera, or something that showed up and barely got noticed.  Where Vivaldi really end up shining is in the small innovations.

 

THE HISTORY SEARCH IS REVOLUTIONARY!!!!

I cannot overstate what a difference it is when you go looking for something a few days, or weeks later.   When you are learning about a new concept or technology and don’t really know what you are looking for, or don’t have the basics and don’t know where you are going to end up.  After you have learned a bit about the new things, and you understand some of what you have read, you end up realizing that you stumbled upon something that really interest you now that you understand it, but you had only glossed over it initially and didn’t understand it, but now you are trying to search for it, but you can’t get the search engine to get you in the right direction.  You go into the vivaldi://history go to the month selector, and drag selector over the general time range you think it was, start searching for the unique thing you remember from your previous explorations, and Viola, there it is.

 

Finally a little thing I love but it bugs me that I can’t do it programatically.  The screenshot tool getting shots of the entire webpage render, not just the viewport, but the full HTML render in a picture!  I wrote a small plugin for PCI auditing and tried to access that functionality, but found it wasn’t accessible without going into ui debug mode with the ecmascript inspector, and passing in flags on Vivaldi start, so I ended up just using the print function and having users click on the print as pdf.  Since that is my biggest gripe about Vivaldi, I can’t really say that I have any gripes about the browser, I actually love it.  It’s been my daily driver for quite a while, and it drives me nuts when I get forced into using something else (Looking at those pages that use NTLM)

 

Still waiting on the email client, but since I use Mutt it’s not really a big need, just a nice to have.  Someday.

Hello world!

Welcome to your new Blog! We’re really excited to see what you do with it.

This draft post is here to show you what your posts will look like and to give you a few tips on getting started. Feel free to edit it, delete it or keep it saved as a draft for reference later.

Publishing

If you’re familiar with WordPress, you’ll be right at home. To get started creating your own posts head to your Dashboard and click Add New to bring up the editor. Fill it up with whatever you choose; it could be a recipe, a review of a new product you love, or simply a new idea that needs to be shared with the world. The world is your oyster.

Hit Publish and that’s it – your post will be live and ready for reading.

The new post will be included in the Reader of other members and may also make an appearance on the Community front page, (vivaldi.net).

P.S. Don’t forget to share your new creation far and wide! Tag Vivaldi (on Twitter or Facebook) and we’ll help you spread the word about your new blog.

Customization

There are a number of ways to customize the look of your new Blog. Head to you site’s Admin Dashboard to adjust the theme, site icon, header images, page layouts, custom widgets and much more. Many of these settings can be found in the Appearance menu.

For the more technically savvy out there, you can of course also use custom CSS to make things just right. To add custom CSS, head to Appearance > Customize.

Import

To import content from another blog, select Tools > Import from menu in your dashboard. Right now there are importers for WordPress, Blogger and Tumblr. If you’d like to import content from another service, let us know!

FAQ

What is the Vivaldi Community?

A place for our friends to hang out online. We want to create a place where people can publish, read and discuss ideas with likeminded folks from around the world. We hope you like it.

Do I have to use Vivaldi’s browser to be here?

No. Many Community members use our browser. But many don’t. Everyone is welcome.

What’s included?

Every member gets a free webmail account ([email protected]), access to the Vivaldi Forums and a free Blog with a custom domain (yourblog.vivaldi.net).

What’s the catch?

We have no plans to monetize, share your data or start charging for any of these services. The Community is simply a way for us to give back something to our users. No catch.

Help and Feedback

Help articles for the Community can be found at help.vivaldi.com. If something seems off or you run into a bug, please let us know by using our contact form or leaving a comment in the forum.

Have a read of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and let us know if you have any questions.

Enjoy, and welcome!