Vivaldi Mail can import your data from the old Opera M2 mail client, which is almost more of an Easter egg than a feature at this point, but a nice touch nonetheless.Īs I said, though, Vivaldi is very much about customization.
Now install either the stable or snapshot (nightly) version of Vivaldi Browser. First, update your repository list to reflect the new repository changes: sudo apt update. I've been using them for several months and found them to be rock solid, but there may still be bugs. Now that you have imported the repository, you can install Vivaldi using the following. The new email client, newsreader, and calendar are all still beta releases, so there may be rough edges. All disputes, actions or proceedings arising under or related to this EULA shall exclusively be referred and resolved by the Oslo City Court. This EULA is therefore governed by the laws of Norway, except its conflict of laws rules and regulations.
It's also just plain handy if you have several email accounts you want to check using a single interface. Vivaldi’s headquarters are based in the beautiful city of Oslo, Norway. It's an empowering tool for those who want it. Putting an email client and newsreader in the browser gives people a way to take back control of those aspects of their online experience. Vivaldi offers an alternative to those of us who don't want Google reading our email, or don't want Facebook and Twitter determining what we read next. The browser also fails a lot of privacy tests on default settings. It lets performance metrics though and Yandex.Metrica gets loaded but fortunately the browser doesnt load it. It's worth asking: Why bother with an email client in a web browser, when everyone uses web-based mail services? Because not everyone does. Vivaldi is also good but it doesnt have sane defaults (broadcasts WebRTC IP, uses lots of Google services).