Vivaldi unveiled the official beta version of the company's web browser a couple of minutes ago marking the next step in the company's plan to win over disgruntled Opera users and Internet users who want control over how their browser looks and behaves.

It feels like Vivaldi has been around for a long time when in fact it has been less than a year. First unveiled in January 2015, it is been pushed out in the open with weekly snapshot releases that, for the most part, worked fine and without larger issues.

Based on Chromium/Blink, it is one of the few browsers based on the Google browser that does not just make marginal interface changes to the browser and keeps everything else as is.

In fact, one of the main goals of the project is to implement popular features that classic Opera supported but modern Opera does not.

If you like to customize your browser, then you don't have much choice in today's browser world. There is Firefox which is still the uncrowned king when it comes to that, and there is Vivaldi now. All other browsers limit what you can do in terms of interface customizations.

Want tabs at the bottom of the screen? Good luck with that while using Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge.

One of Vivaldi's strengths is the customization options it makes available. Place tabs on the side or bottom, show or hide the status bar, or show the address bar or bookmark bar at the bottom instead of the top.

There is a light and dark theme available already, lots of options to modify the start page of the browser, and if you want, you can make the UI adapt the color of the pages you are visiting.

There is more to Vivaldi than that though. If you have used classic Opera you will recognize long lost features like tab stacking or the side panel that are already available in Vivaldi.

Once you have started stacking tabs, you may display them all in a single tab side by side using the browser's tiling functionality.

Vivaldi supports keyboard shortcuts, and gives you options to remap these shortcuts right in its interface. The only other browser that lets you do that is Firefox but you need add-ons for that in the browser (Update: modern Opera provides those options as well).

Quick Commands is another interesting feature. Tap on F2 to display a command prompt to launch commands quickly. Type what you want to do, e.g. "private" and select the "new private window" option using the keyboard.

The beta ships with improved support for Google Chrome extensions. According to Vivaldi, you should be able to install and use most Chrome extensions in the browser now.

Benchmark Comparison

Browser / Benchmark HTML5Test Kraken Octane Google Chrome 46 521 1677.4 19514 Microsoft Edge 397 1849.5 21547 Mozilla Firefox 42 466 1715.7 17682 Opera 34 Dev 520 1824.6 19001 Vivaldi Beta 521 1777.9 18892

Check out the official blog post on the Vivaldi website for a detailed look as to what the browser is offering right now. Downloads are provided on the page, but if you are running Vivaldi already you may also update it from within the browser itself.

Tip: If you are interested in how it all started, check out this podcast with Jon Von Tetzchner, Vivaldi CEO and Opera Software co-founder.

Summary Article Name Finally: Vivaldi Beta is now available Description Vivaldi has just launched the first beta version of the Vivaldi browser to the public. Author Martin Brinkmann Publisher Ghacks Technology News Logo

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