Today’s announcement of an improved RSS reader made me consider @Vivaldi again. Unfortunately, it’s still far from a competitive RSS reader. I do however hope they continue working on it since it might give them an edge among all Chromium browsers.
vivaldi.com/blog/vivaldi-on-de…
A New Vivaldi - A Whole New Browsing Experience
Vivaldi 7.0 introduces a completely redesigned user interface, featuring floating tabs, sleek new icons, and a customizable Dashboard. The new Dashboard centralizes your digital tools into one convenient space.Jon von Tetzchner (Vivaldi Technologies)
Jon S. von Tetzchner
Als Antwort auf Karl Emil Nikka • • •Karl Emil Nikka
Als Antwort auf Jon S. von Tetzchner • • •[1/3] Thanks for reaching out. The most important missing feature is sync between devices (already suggested in the forums). I would personally also need Vivaldi’s reader mode for all articles, directly in the feed view (like e.g., Reeder 5).
Karl Emil Nikka
Als Antwort auf Karl Emil Nikka • • •[2/3] Other than that, there are some bugs that need to be ironed out. The new feed view still has the controls inherited from the email client. Feed items’ pre-texts aren’t parsed (showing HTML tags). Creating new folders appear to fail if there are no feeds (though the folders show up after a reload).
Karl Emil Nikka
Als Antwort auf Karl Emil Nikka • • •@jon
[3/3] If you also add support for saving articles and adding highlights to articles in the reader list, Vivaldi will become the world’s first and only privacy protecting RSS/read-it-later app. There are no read-it-later apps that supports end-to-end encrypted sync of saved articles.
Vivaldi would be the only browser offering a way to store and highlight the web in a secure, privacy focused, and accessible way.
Jon S. von Tetzchner
Als Antwort auf Karl Emil Nikka • • •Karl Emil Nikka
Als Antwort auf Karl Emil Nikka • • •