Justin By then clicking on the New Window button, I can put a new instance of Vivaldi in the empty workspace I've previously selected. In all I have three workspaces where an instance of Vivaldi runs on my laptop... one for financial matters, one for the Solus forum and related sites, and one for miscellaneous browsing, such as online shopping.

You make completely valid points here. There is no reason anyone has to run multiple instances of anything. The reason I do it is mostly to avoid the desire to click on my web panels or bookmarks "just to check" on something that will lead me down a rabbit hole.

So separation is one reason for running multiple browsers. Another is that I do want to support Firefox as much as possible. Their Gecko browser engine is the only other option outside of Chromium-based Blink and Apple's WebKit. I love Vivaldi but I feel that we should support Mozilla Firefox in whatever little way we are able to in order to promote competition.

The same extension (LastPass) is used by each instance, as are all the same settings, and I've needed to do only one installation and configuration. And I needed to learn well only one browser's secrets and idiosyncrasies.

You should absolutely NOT be using Lastpass. They have a long, long history of security breaches. There were breaches in 2015, 2019, 2020, and just this year.

They are the worst of the worst when it comes to securing your passwords.

I used to pay money for Dashlane but they refused to create a Linux app and so I left them. Dashlane is a great service and I would have loved to give them my money but they were holding me back from migrating to Linux so I ditched them.

Right now I use Bitwarden. I could not be happier. Their 2020 Audit had a few issues that needed to be addressed but they have not suffered any data breaches (that I am aware of) and they are an open source project.

Bitwarden is available on every single Browser and Operating system.. as a Flatpak, Snap, on most Linux distros, macOS, Android, and Windows, and there is a dedicated browser extension for Firefox, Chrome, Opera and iOS.

It is vastly superior to Lastpass. It functions quite similarly but the autofill is disabled by default. That autofill that makes Lastpass seem so great is one of their biggest security flaws. If you want it on Bitwarden and you are willing to take the risks you can turn it on though.

I REALLY suggest you make the switch to Bitwarden. It is easy to export your passwords from Latspass.

Since I have been using Bitwarden I have not had any issues at all with keeping my passwords up to date. They have a password generator that I use quite often, and a password history so you can view the changes you have made to your passwords over time. I pay for the Premium version to support them. With Premium you can use Bitwarden not only as password manager, but as a TOTP Authenticator like Authy. And instead of having to look at your Authy for the two-step codes you can have Bitwarden handle it all.

I haven't gotten around to doing this yet but I have so many freaking passwords and accounts with two step. However.. After making the switch from Authy to Bitwarden TOTP it would make my life tremendously easier.

    WetGeek

    brent

    I wish I could give you better answers, but I don't even understand some of the questions or terms like cross-tracked. I can only say that from one workspace that contains a Vivaldi instance to another that contains a different Vivaldi instance, I've never seen any interference from one to the other.

    I do believe that the settings are common, but I've never researched that.

    To the best of my knowledge any Browser shares cookies regardless of whether you have one instance or multiple instances of it open.

    brent if you wanted to use Vivaldi to have different sets of Cookies you could do that. You would use their Profile Management options to create a new User Profile. This functions very much like Chrome's multi-user profiles but from what I know Vivaldi developed their profiles and sync separately from Chrom/ium. They have a strong privacy stance and I would think this would be the way to go.

    jrsilvey hey have a long, long history of security breaches.

    As the Forbes article points out, "One security expert told Ars Technica that heโ€™s so confident in LastPassโ€™ hashing that he doesnโ€™t even feel compelled to change his master password." Neither do I.

    These "security breaches" sound more like attempts, not successful attacks.

    jrsilvey yes, Opera was split and the consumer facing side was bought by a Chinese consortium, but the company is still located in Norway. As such, it has to comply with Norwegian laws which are quite strict.

    If you're on the internet, someone somewhere is scraping your data and using it for profit or nefarious reasons. It's all about how much you're personally comfortable with giving up.

    • [deleted]

    lumi yeah palemoon is a good browser,but sadly๐Ÿ˜” it is not very well recieved among todays users. some days ago my younger brother saw me using palemoon and he asked me why i use such an "outdated browser"
    i told him it was the latest version but he just went away laughing.

      [deleted] having tried to use Pale Moon in the past, i know that it tends to lag behind standards, especially when it comes to multimedia. The developers and community are also pretty toxic when it comes to pushing their ideologies :/

      It's a nice concept, but the execution is lacking, imo.

      22 days later

      I really like Vivaldi, but font density is thin in Chromium-based browsers, so I keep using FireFox for most everything because the text appears similar to all of the other software that I use.

      GSingh1994 Yeah it's a pity that Mozilla discontinued SSB support in Firefox.

      GSingh1994

      GSingh1994 Google chrome because Firefox doesn't support PWA

      I use Vivaldi but I find the PWA implementation in browsers overall to be lacking.

      I use a program called WebCatalog. It turns any website into a functional desktop client. It integrates certain extensions (like DarkReader) into the apps that you can use to manipulate the look and feel.
      The free version allows you to make two free apps from sites. The premium version allows unlimited apps to be made. I have something like 50 or 60 apps and I use them in some combination every day.

      The only downside is a lack of integrated password manager.

      5 days later

      I use Firefox with a bunch of add ons. Part of it is just because I am an old geezer and I have been using Firefox since about version 1.5 if I remember correctly.

        20 days later

        Mostly it is Firefox, but now trying Brave. Need lighter one, also available on Linux and Android

          DanFromWinterpeg I was using it when it was called Phoenix but they had to change the name because of the Phoenix BIOS manufacturer... it then became Firebird but then again they had to change the name because Firebird is the name of a database... it then becomes Firefox and was released in v1.0 if I recall correctly.

          Thunderbird didn't had to change its name otherwise we'd have got Thunderfox I guess ๐Ÿ˜…

            kyrios Which is odd since Thunderbird in the USA has a 100 year history of making Americans cheap, rot-gut wine: it's synonymous with being down and out and the kind of vintage best drank on a park bench at 7am (I've been told๐Ÿ˜‰).
            Maybe the company was too wasted to sue Mozilla?

              EbonJaeger The TBird wine company has really let some opportunities go, haven't they? ๐Ÿ˜„