• The Quuuuuill
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        358 days ago

        sure. i also dislike that it’s a closed source product created by a private company that could rug pull all the users to turn a quick buck at any time. they haven’t in the last 10 years, and come from a legacy of a company that was very respectful of their customers (opera) but you could also argue the legacy of opera being bought by a spyware company was the last rugpull and that vivaldi will inevitably do the same. but that’s a more abstract complaint

        • @[email protected]
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          16 days ago

          Dude. The day any other browser comes close to the functionality of Vivaldi, I’ll switch. But from my experience with Firefox and Brave, that’s far in the future.

          • The Quuuuuill
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            16 days ago

            what functionality do other browsers lack? i really mean it. my question is “why vivaldi of all things” and i still don’t think i know

    • @[email protected]
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      47 days ago

      My job basically requires that I use Chrome (I work for a SaaS company whose product’s advance features only work on Chromium). Vivaldi has, at least so far, performed the best, offered the most customization that suited my needs, and isn’t Chrome/Edge. I liked Arc as well, but it has the same issues that Vivaldi has.

      I don’t like Brave due to its push of AI/crypto, and Opera doesn’t really work with some of our internal apps.

      As a decades long Firefox user it sucks, but I don’t have much of a choice when it comes to work. It’s tough finding alternatives built on Chromium that accomplish everything I need without there being some major caveat.