Yes Vivaldi is my main browser and I trust it. But it is cluttered, but at least you can disable what you do not want (such as email and other stuff). As for Brave, I do not trust it for past incidents (such as when they injected their referrals in links) and I hate their business model and the crypto stuff. Brave Origin (a one-time payment) which gives you Brave without the nonsense is a welcome idea.I've read your 2026 configuration settings and noticed that your primary browser is Vivaldi in both. I'd like to know what you like about it. I'm asking because I'm currently using Vivaldi as well, but I'm torn between it and Brave, so I'd like to know your opinion on it compared to Brave as well.
I also noticed that your secondary browser is based on Firefox. I used to be a Firefox user for a long time, but I think it's almost dead now, so why are you using Firefox ESR specifically? And what do you think of the Zen browser?
Thank you.
Not really, I want a browser that is fast, compliant with web standards (I've noticed that Firefox has started to have some issues with some sites), respects user privacy, and doesn't write huge amounts of data to the SSD or significantly increase CPU consumption with heavy websites.Are you asking about a specific feature? Privacy concerns? Resources consumption?
Vivaldi is the answer. It is not perfect, but it is less evil.Not really, I want a browser that is fast, compliant with web standards (I've noticed that Firefox has started to have some issues with some sites), respects user privacy, and doesn't write huge amounts of data to the SSD or significantly increase CPU consumption with heavy websites.
Yes I am using Eset on default settings. I will certainly ditch Eset for MD + OS Armor when my subscription ends.Are you still using ESET with default configuration ? Change something, use the HIPS. Or else you will be the kind of victim with a default OS wirth a default AV - hackers are prepared for those setups.
It definitely has; the news website I used to read everyday disaplayed incorrectly while using Zen.I've noticed that Firefox has started to have some issues with some sites
Reminds me of LibreOffice; too much features but half baked.Vivaldi is my main browser and I trust it. But it is cluttered
Onlyoffice is much better than Libreoffice.Reminds me of LibreOffice; too much features but half baked.
You do not own the resoureces for such featuers; keep it simple and limited to be able to maitain.
Agree, but more resource hungry and less stable.Onlyoffice is much better than Libreoffice.
Where have you been? For a minute there I thought you were conscripted and sent to the front line?Agree, but more resource hungry and less stable.
I wrote my whole dissertation on it. Never experienced what you're saying.Agree, but more resource hungry and less stable.
They need to move away from being a web wrapper.I wrote my whole dissertation on it. Never experienced what you're saying.
It is not an ordinary web wrapper. It works offline.They need to move away from being a web wrapper.
Crashed several times after opening a large number of pd files; never happened with Pdf-xchange or even Foxit.It is not an ordinary web wrapper. It works offline.
Honeslty, I do not use Onlyoffice to open PDF files. Instead I am using Wondershare PDFelement and Swifdoo.Crashed several times after opening a large number of pd files; never happened with Pdf-xchange or even Foxit.
I use vivaldi intensively and am using kaspersky without any issues.Vivaldi is my main browser. Lately I have been experiencing an increased amount of Cloudflare security checks. Now I was trying to change the email address of my Norton account and I kept receiving the error msg "your device is sending too much data". This only happens in Vivaldi and not in any other browsers.
In my attempts to find the culprit, it seems that Eset https scanning is the root cause. Disabling Eset's protection does fix the issue.
I believe it is time to ditch Eset and look for sth that does not force https scanning. It is either MD or Trend Micro for me. Kaspersky, Eset, Bitdefender and Norton use https scanning