Vivaldi released Version 1.3 introduces 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.
Enhancing our personalization options, Vivaldi 1.3 introduces custom themes, so you can customize every UI element to your taste, or pick from additional themes from our designers. This makes Vivaldi the most colorful browser available. You can see it in action here:
Custom Themes also bring an accessibility improvement, because we added programmatic support to enforce minimal contrast. This makes Vivaldi more comfortable to use for people with visual impairments, or who work in dimly lit environments.
Improving privacy is also a paramount concern for Vivaldi. WebRTC brings voice, video chat and file sharing applications to the web browser natively in HTML, but it can also broadcast your IP address, which websites can use to track you. In Vivaldi 1.3 we added a setting to turn this off. Hurray for more privacy.
Mouse gestures get a major improvement in version 1.3. We’ve added more default mouse gestures and you can even customize more than 90 different browser actions.
For Linux users, we made some platform-specific improvements with this release. First, we made tab hibernation better for you. Tab hibernation puts tabs to sleep, so they don’t hog system resources. To hibernate a tab, simply right click on it. We also improved our support for proprietary media in HTML5.