Web

Vivaldi web browser continues to enrich personal customization with new custom theme scheduling

While Chrome still dominates as the most popular web browser, Vivaldi continues to surpass the Google giant in personal customization in web browsing.

Today, Vivaldi launched Version 1.4 that allows you to take charge of scheduling themes along with improved web panels. Now you can schedule which theme you want for your web browser for anytime of the day.

The new feature allows you to switch your favorite theme according to your schedule as many times as you want during the day – be it when you leave for or arrive at work, or when it’s time to call it a day or night. Theme scheduling makes Vivaldi the only browser which changes the theme automatically.

Already preferred by the likes of Gizmodo, BGR, and Digital Trends, Vivaldi’s versatility is a hit among tech enthusiasts, and the updates keep on coming.

“Vivaldi is all about putting the user in control,” said CEO Jon von Tetzchner. “Whether it’s improving the personalization by adding custom themes, increasing privacy, or giving more options and features, we put our users first with everything we do. We want to make browsing safer, more personal, more productive and more fun for everyone.”

And the upgrades keep on coming for the company based out of Oslo with offices in Reykjavik, Boston and Palo Alto.

Just last month Vivaldi launched Version 1.3, which included Custom Themes to add a new dimension to personalization, protection for WebRTC IP leakage to improve privacy, and more mouse gestures to name just a few.

Vivaldi’s revolutionary tab tiling and stacking lets you group multiple tabs into one by dragging a tab over to another for an uncomplicated grouping. With Tab Stack Tiling, you can display multiple tabs side by side or in a grid layout. Through multiple tab stacks that are tiled, you have multiple desktops, which you can switch between with a single click.

Other featured highlights include a note-taking panel, quick commands, and its colorful, adaptive interface.

Just because something has the big name backing of Google, like Chrome, doesn’t mean it’s the best. Vivaldi continues to enrich personal browsing through its social technology, and its constant updates ensure that plenty of new innovation is always in the works.

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

Recent Posts

‘I hope AI becomes a new religion because I benefit’: Eric Schmidt on Henry Kissinger at Harvard

Cui bono? If AI were to become a religion, then the Priests, Imams, Rabbis, and…

4 days ago

Why mandatory sustainability reporting is so much more than a compliance exercise: Finding the path to operational value 

Throughout the course of 2025, we’ve seen a huge uptick in the number of countries…

4 days ago

IARPA B-SAURUS program aims to identify, reverse engineer explosives, drugs & counterfeit materials in supply chains

The US spy community's research and development funding arm IARPA announces the B-SAURUS program to…

5 days ago

Vendavo partners with Ness, enters a new era of scalable value creation

About a decade ago, Software as a Service (SaaS) was disrupting the tech world from…

6 days ago

AI company Prezent reaches latest milestone following recognition as top software company in 2025

The Software Report is a comprehensive source for market research and insights, business news, investment…

6 days ago

Genesis Mission to unify US datasets on single platform to feed AI

The road to the Genesis Mission was paved by technocrats like Larry Ellison and Tony…

2 weeks ago