Web browsers: Vivaldi

I have tended to think that, while there are technical differences, in practical terms web browsers are commodities. Others may disagree but I’ve been using Vivaldi for a few months and I love it.

It feels like Vivaldi has broken from the pack. It’s hugely customisable, so I can cover only a small fraction of its features in this article, but I get huge value from just those.

Part of a series:

  1. Introduction. About the series.
  2. The key to finding things. Tags.
  3. Browsers. Vivaldi.
  4. Bookmarks. Raindrop.io.
  5. Emails. Outlook.
  6. Files. Everything and XYplorer.
  7. Music. MP3tag and Musicolet.

Vivaldi helps find things

I used to lose a website all-too-often. Was it a closed tab? Or perhaps it was one the many open tabs? Vivaldi has helped in several ways:

I now rarely lose a site. I don’t need to keep too many tabs open. If I lose something I can usually easily find it, using a variety of methods.

A visual introduction

We’ll refer to this screenshot later. One thing not covered is the taskbar at the bottom of the screen; this gives me nice 1-click access to key apps but belongs to Windows, not Vivaldi.

The Vivaldi browser

1 - Flavours: Desktop, Android and iOS

You can install Vivaldi on desktop (Windows for me) and mobile devices (Android for me). Vivaldi apparently also works with iOS, although I haven’t been able to test that.

You can (optionally) sync things (e.g. bookmarks, workspaces - see below) across devices. This reuires registration, but they don’t spam.

There are, of course, slight differences across Android and Desktop - see “Built in tools” below for one example - but it’s an impressive achievement.

2 - Security

Look to the right of the graphic. Vivaldi has blocked 8055 trackers and 2149 ads.

Vivaldi has nice internal blocking of ads and trackers which plays nicely with browser extensions doing similar things e.g. uBlock Origin.

3 - More one-clicking

I love the one-click idea: put things in the right place and one click later the magic starts.

Sometimes this one-click approach comes “out of the box”, but often the user needs to do one-off work, teasing the app to cooperate.

Vivaldi makes one-clicking easy. Let’s look at speed dial.

4 - Speed dial

Look again at the right of the graphic. You can search from a customisable search engine; I’ve chosen DuckDuckGo for privacy reasons. Easy. But let’s get to my speed dial point.

The last of the 14 squares adds a new website to the speed dial, while the first 13 give one-click access to my most frequently used websites. In order:

  1. Bookmarks, using raindrop.io.
  2. Bookmark management - a separate page at raindrop.
  3. Amazon UK.
  4. Radio 4.
  5. BBC news.
  6. chatGPT.
  7. Google finance.
  8. Liverpool FC.
  9. Premier League scores bypasses recent search engine mess.
  10. LinkedIn.
  11. YouTube - for background music; customise for a deeper dive.
  12. Spotify - YouTube diversification.
  13. Plan train trips.

Clicking Amazon UK goes to my list of lists, no longer hidden in the Amazon UI. Search is also available from that page of course.

5 - Customisations

Just one example: on my speed dial page I can easily order and re-order the squares - alphabetically or otherwise.

I can resize the squares; this is useful if you have a lot of items on the speed dial and are working on a laptop or smaller device. Items can too easily drop “below the fold”.

To avoid scrolling, drop the square size and set the maximum number of items per row. All accessible through the settings cog on the bottom left icon on the graphic.

6 - Side panel

On the top left of the graphic are a number of icons: below the Vivaldi icon we have the side panel, the bookmarks (highlighted), a reading list, the downloads, my website history, quick access to my workspaces and my raindrop.io extension.

You can customise the side panel icons; I’ve hidden some.

7 - Workspaces

A grey image showing text 60 x 60

You can group related tabs into a "workspace" then switch between workspaces, using the icon on the top left.

My current workspace - web - has five tabs. I could switch to my expenses workspace - expstst - and two relevant tabs would be loaded.

Reviews indicate that some people love this feature, regarding it as a game changer. Perhaps I will come to agree as my practice develops?

8 - Bookmarks

Browsers don’t handle bookmarks well, so many third-party tools have been developed. I use raindrop.io and consequently use bookmarks in Vivaldi minimally.

In each workspace I have a set of tabs (websites) which load when the workspace is selected. It’s easy to close one of those tabs accidentally, when the tab will be lost to the workspace.

Therefore for each workspace I have a folder (under bookmarks) in which I more permanently store my list of workspace websites - and nothing else.

9 - Built in tools

The side panel contains a number of things (history, downloads etc) which I find useful and more easily accessible than with other browsers where they are more hidden away.

Vivaldi offers email and calendar and many more features.

I’m personally not too demanding in terms of my need for other tools; my primary need is a good browsing experience. I’ve already covered that Vivaldi is not great for bookmarks, largely because it does not let you use tags. I resolve this by using other tools.

But one occasional need is to capture an area of a web page as a graphic - or indeed the full page, which may involve some scrolling. This works perfectly on Android, although the graphics are correspondingly narrow.

On a desktop it’s a little trickier. The camera icon suggests everything should work - you get the “selection” and “full page” options. But the full page only captures the viewable screen and doesn’t scroll. This is hinted at in the Android-specific help topic.

Until The Vivaldi team get to this I’ll use the Go Full Page extension.

10 - Extensions

Vivaldi is a Chromium web browser which means, among other things, that browser extensions on the Chrome web store work with Vivaldi as well as Chrome. No headaches there.

Today I use just 6 extensions to enhance features and productivity.

In conclusion

This article shows just a few of Vivaldi’s productivity-related features. There are many more.

If you do decide to give Vivaldi a try I hope you enjoy it as much as I have.