I use PaleMoon for a cluster of TW Classics. Never had a problem, but then again that's the only thing I use PaleMoon for. FF takes care of my surfing.
I'm on Linux and I always keep at least the two most recent (working) deb-files of PaleMoon just in case. On Linux Mint it is very simple to make a keyboard shortcut to open a specific TWC with PaleMoon. Simple, efficient and fast. On Tuesday, March 7, 2017 at 2:45:22 AM UTC+1, Duarte Farrajota Ramos wrote: > > Hey guys have you heard about the Vivaldi browser <https://vivaldi.com/>? > By searching here I only found a handful of fleeting mentions in the > forum, mostly amidst troubleshooting posts, so I thought i'd make a more > formal introduction. > > Please forgive the shameless publicity (I am not affiliated with them in > anyway, just a happy user); but being a Web Browser specifically targeted > for power users I though it might please some of the folks here, since it > seems to stand for some of the same principles TiddlyWiki does (like > flexibility, privacy, configurability). > > <https://thenextweb.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2015/01/vivaldi.gif> > > > It was created as a followup to the late "classic" Opera Browser 12 > <https://vivaldi.com/story/>, by a team of some of the same developers > <https://vivaldi.com/team/>. It is still in its infancy, occasional bugs, > some rough edges here and there, but overall a great browser. > It is a Blink rendering engine based browser, using the Chromium base, it > supports lost of the official Chrome extensions, and adds a layer of new > features on top of that, with a beautifully designed UI to go along with it. > Some of the features that standout to me the most are: > > > - Tileable tabs, side-by-side or vertically > - Sidebar with tools and custom web-panels > - Builtin mouse-gestures > - Bookmark aliases or nicknames > - Tab stacking > - Customizable keyboard shortcuts > - Builtin screenshot tool > - And a lot more <https://vivaldi.com/features/> > > I'm particularly fond of tileable tabs, which allows me to easily compare > between to pages, and the web panels where I like to keep an always open, > easily accessible personal Notes TiddlyWiki file. Very convenient as a note > taking tool. > A new fantastic History > <https://vivaldi.com/blog/snapshots/a-historic-snapshot-vivaldi-browser-snapshot-1-8-770-9/> > > page is coming in the development snapshots too. Bookmark/data sync, > builtin email client and newsfeed reader are also coming in the future, and > after that a mobile browser too. > > Why am I posting this here? Well seeing it is a free browser and money is > made primarily from user searches I though I'd try and gather a few more > users for them. More users means more money, more money means more > developers which leads to a better browser which I happen to love. > In a land where the late trend is for minimal featureless striped down > browsers, where more and more people flock to mobile devices, I though that > this Vivaldi stood out in a positive way and might please the "power users" > and more technically savvy people here since some of its features pair well > with TiddlyWiki. > > If you find this inappropriate feel free to close/block/ignore the thread, > no harm intended :) > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to tiddlywiki+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to tiddlywiki@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/0a99b7f9-961b-4d65-a839-3ec816e3de15%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.