Tag Archives: OddBox

Vivaldi getting closer to 1.0. Beta 3 is here with New session load/save, tab zoom and a lot of new options!

Dear Friends,

Spring is just around the corner so is Vivaldi 1.0. While we are waiting for it, we thought we would share the latest update with you.

Since the Beta 2, our primary focus for this release has been on improving performance and stability, as well as polishing the design throughout Vivaldi UI. This includes adding a lot of new settings as always 🙂 and we have also added a few new features.

Download here!

 

Here are some of the highlights for the new features and changes in this Beta 3 release:

A sessions save/load

This is our first implementation of the session manager. In this implementation, you can save all of your currently open tabs as a session so that you can go back and open them all at once. So for example, you can have a work session different from a private session. That way, you can very quickly switch between completely different set of tabs for work, and for your private research or what not.

To save a session, go to File menu and click “Save Open Tabs as Session”.

 

And to open a session, Go to Open a session under the File menu and choose from the saved sessions. 

Tab specific zoom allows you to set zoom level for each tab, rather than for each website domain. It avoids having all the tabs zoomed when visiting the same website in different tabs and allows you to keep one zoom level while browsing in a tab.

 

New Tab Hibernation Options

This new option gives you more control on your resources. If you are like us and want to have many tabs open, simply right click on the active tab and choose ‘Hibernation Background tabs’. This will immediately free up more resources as your tabs are ‘put to sleep’. Switching over to any of them will bring them back to life.

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New options and defaults for tab opening and closing behaviour

Another improvement from Beta 2 based on user feedback is tab opening/closing behaviour. When you open new tabs from a link in your current tab, they share a relationship. For example, say you perform a search in your current tab and Ctrl+Click the first search result, it will then open next to its “parent”. If you Ctrl+Click a second result, the new tab will place itself immediately after its “sibling”.

New tabs that you open via Ctrl+T or by clicking on “+” have no relationships and will therefore open on next to the “+” button, just like before.

Opening behaviour goes hand in hand with closing behaviour, so we have also made a change here as well. With the new default, when a focused tab is closed, Vivaldi will switch to its right-most (or bottom-most) “relative”. In cases where there are no relationships between tabs, Vivaldi will switch to the last activated tab (our old behavior). This combination of tab relationships and activation order, should result in a best of both worlds default and an improvement over what the other browsers are doing.

The new default works especially well when opening lots of links from one site and then closing them down one by one to return to whatever you were working on before.

But of course, all of this can be customized as you like from Tabs menu in the Settings.

 

A suggestion for our regular snapshot users, if you’ve downloaded our recent snapshot, a new installation is not required as this includes the same fixes that you received in the last snapshot.

Thank you always to all of you for supporting us and active contributor to our development as well as being strong advocate for Vivaldi. Enjoy the new beta!

 

 

History of U.S Airmail Service – 29 Amazing Vintage Photos of the early Days of Transporting Letters and Packages by Planes in America

These photos show the nearly 100-year-old history of U.S airmail service, beginning on May 15, 1918.

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First day of the U.S airmail service, May 15, 1918

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JR-1B mail airplane designed by the Standard Aircraft Corporation, 31 Dec. 1918

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JR-1B mail airplane, 1918

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Loading airmail in New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1925

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New York City postmaster Thomas G. Patten and airmail pilot Lt. Torrey Webb, 1918

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“I graduated last May with an accounting degree and moved to…

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“I graduated last May with an accounting degree and moved to the city. But four months had passed and I didn’t have a job yet. I’d probably sent out my resume to thirty different places. And I couldn’t afford to keep waiting for people to call me back. So I went to the strip with all the car dealerships, and started going door-to-door to see if they had any openings in accounting. I’ve always loved cars. I used to always read Consumer Reports with my dad. So I thought it would be a good fit. The lady at BMW was a bit standoffish. Then I went to Audi. They were great. Super welcoming. But they didn’t have any positions at the moment. Then I got to Jaguar/Land Rover– which was my first choice, so I was working up to it— and they sat me down right there for an interview. I was there all afternoon, then they said: ‘We like what we see. Can you start tomorrow?’ I ran outside and called my parents. My dad was so proud of me. I was so proud of myself.”