Vivaldi 2.4 RC 3 – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1488.33

March 26, 2019

Today’s snapshot is the third release candidate for 2.4.

Vivaldi 2.4 RC 2 – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1488.29

March 25, 2019

Today’s snapshot is the second release candidate for 2.4.

Vivaldi 2.4 RC 1 – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1488.26

March 22, 2019

Today’s snapshot is the first release candidate for 2.4.

One library to rule them all

March 22, 2019

Oslo Public Library is Norway’s oldest and largest public library. Now you’ll find Vivaldi installed on their public terminals.

Getting closer – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1488.25

March 21, 2019

For today’s snapshot the focus remains on fixing outstanding regressions.

Fit your style! Change the look of your browser.

March 20, 2019

Vivaldi has endless options for you to make it feel your own. Here we show you three simple ways to do just that.

Closing in on 2.4 – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1488.4

March 19, 2019

2.4 is getting quite close now, so today’s snapshot is focused on fixing recent regressions.

Browsing with Mouse Gestures

Browse fast with Vivaldi’s awesome Mouse Gestures

March 14, 2019

We have five simple gestures for you to try today. But beware – you might get hooked!

Bookmarks bar context menu support – Vivaldi Browser snapshot 1483.4

March 14, 2019

With today’s snapshot we have added support for context menus inside folders on the bookmarks bar (for Windows and Linux), fixed a ton of regressions and taken a minor bump to Chromium.

Minor update (5) for Vivaldi 2.3

March 14, 2019

Today’s minor update to Vivaldi 2.3 improves on a fix for “Find-in-page” freezing and should resolve page loading problems that some users encountered on YouTube.

Building browsers! #Web30

March 12, 2019

As the World Wide Web turns 30, we ask one of its pioneers – Vivaldi founder Jon von Tetzchner – to take us back to his early days of building web browsers.

The Web: 30 years of history, challenges and change

March 11, 2019

The web started thirty years ago when a young British software engineer called Tim Berners-Lee invented a system for scientists to share information. Here we add some little known bits of history to the puzzle.