The Android and iPhone/iPad versions of Vivaldi are still just regular web browsers, at least for now. Vivaldi Mail, Calendar, and Feed Reader are rolling out in the desktop versions of the browser (on macOS, Windows, and Linux). Microsoft is also starting to test a brand new Outlook app for Windows, but the current version is missing many features. Mozilla Thunderbird is working on major updates, thanks to an expanded team and new organization, with an Android version in the works. Vivaldi Mail seems to be part of a larger resurgence in desktop email applications, even if only by coincidence. Best of all, if you use Vivaldi for web browsing but don’t care about the new stuff, it can all be turned off from a single checkbox in the settings. Vivaldi 5.7 supports a new shortcut to mark emails as spam. You can modify more or less any keyboard shortcut. Vivaldi is also one of the most customizable browsers. All those features makes Vivaldi into a one-stop shop for productivity work and web browsing, in the spirit of the old Netscape Communicator and Mozilla Application Suite. Vivaldi marks any email that is selected by the user as read automatically, when the preference is set to on. For more information about our privacy practices please visit our website. We will treat your information with respect. The email client also integrates into Vivaldi Calendar, a calendar client with support for synchronization with cloud accounts, and Vivaldi Feeds, an RSS reader. You can change your mind at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the footer of any email you receive from us, or by contacting us at. You can also switch between a three-panel layout that matches Gmail, or a horizontal split design that looks more like Thunderbird and older versions of Microsoft Outlook. Navigation and sorting is a core focus, with “sixteen configurable shortcuts for activities such as composing new emails, replying to emails, and more,” all of which are accessible from your keyboard or the HUD-like quick command bar. There are a few more unique features in Vivaldi Mail. You can synchronize multiple email accounts (both IMAP and POP3 are supported), search for messages, set signatures, and a lot more. It’s similar to apps like Apple Mail and Thunderbird, with a locally-synchronized copy of all your email in a searchable index - in other words, it doesn’t rely on a cloud service with copies of all your messages, which can be a problem with with Newton Mail and some other apps. Vivaldi Mail is a full-featured mail client built into the Vivaldi web browser, available for Mac, Windows, and Linux. Now the email client is officially exiting beta with today’s 1.0 release. Īs of September 2021, Vivaldi has more than 2.3 million active users.The Vivaldi web browser isn’t just a browser: it added an email client last year as a beta feature. Vivaldi released a mobile (Android) beta version on September 6, 2019, and a regular release on April 22, 2020. Despite also being Chromium-based, Vivaldi aims to revive the features of the Presto-based Opera with its own proprietary modifications. Albanian, Arabic, Armenian, Basque, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, Frisian, Galician, Georgian, German, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ido, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Kurdish, Latvian, Lithuanian, Lojban, Macedonian, Norwegian (Bokmal), Norwegian (Nynorsk), Persian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Sardinian, Scots Gaelic, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Peru), Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian, VietnameseīSD-3 and Proprietary freeware Īlthough intended for general users, it is first and foremost targeted towards technically-inclined users as well as former Opera users disgruntled by its transition from the Presto layout engine to a Chromium-based browser that resulted in the loss of many of its iconic features.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |