![]() ![]() Most browser do then give a warning about more tabs open, but V does not do that (yet?) Opera also kept a list of what was open, so after a break-down all open sites could be restored. ![]() ", was used to use windows instead of tabs and it is very difficult to get that automatic clicking on the X out. I, as Jim in "I had the impression Vivaldi. In Linux (Opensuse) I can not get HTML5 running, but I hear that that seems to be a problem for most Chrome-based browsers Firefox does not have a problem there. To my surprise it had cleared two days later on without me doing anything. I tried the suggested Chrome solutions but to no immediate avail. I axed the sleeping.Īfter the re-installation I had a new problem for a while: Vivaldi blocked all access to any https site. It now only hangs after the computer was asleep while Vivaldi was on, and then really good everything is frozen and I need to make a hard reset. I have re-installed W7 and all programs it must have been a queer interaction between the W7 and Vivaldi, because the hanging up during browsing is now gone. To make a summing up of a few ones in the title will not be shorter than two words, but I suppose that I could make a few posts, each with its own title. "try a title that actually (shortly) describes the problem." Also the toggle of the panel is a very good the way it is implemented. What definitely is a good idea is that, when a tab is opened in the background and it has a video, it only starts to run when that tab is focused. The management of the bookmarks is, say, unusual and contrary to Occam's principle of simplicity why not develop the management as exact and as legally allowed as possible to Opera 12 (auto-sorting on alphabet (other sorting hardly necessary?) with directories first, adding new bookmarks, deleting them etc.)? As my Opera 12 shows that it is an old code machine, I tried a whole range of other browsers, like Pale Moon and Seamonkey those are good, but I like the speed, the UI and the handling of Vivaldi best. Occasionally, when only a few tabs are open, closing one of the tabs closes down the browser. After closing down Vivaldi, the task manager shows a few instances that are still running. Only Vivaldi was running at the time, no other program. This is annoying as it is not a rare occurrence. Restarting Vivaldi runs it in a normal way again. Sometimes, when killing the right Vivaldi process, all the others are stopped at the same time, so it looks like that there is one instance that calls a lot of child processes. ![]() This can only be stopped by killing all running Vivaldi copies with the task manager. Sometimes, and particularly when several sites are opened in the background that have videos, the single copy of the browser runs amok, takes over both processors and blocks the system by running them at maximum speed. See screenshot of taskmanager with 17 Vivaldis running. Not a problem, but a suggestion: If more than 1 tabs are open, the browser should give a warning upon closing -Although only one copy of Vivaldi is opened and only two or three tabs are open, the taskmanager invariably shows at least 8 Vivaldi processes running. I run also Vivaldi in Opensuse, but the following problems only occur in Windows and only with Vivaldi, not with any other browser. I have W7, Privatefirewall, Ghostery and an extended hosts file, but no anti-virus and minimal Windows services running. ![]()
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