Blocklist-Update.sh is a script that I wrote to manage blocklists from bluetack etc to be used in conjunction with Transmission torrent downloader in Linux/MacOS. The script can be taylored to work with Qbittorrent as well, but the placement of the blocklists means you'd have to redirect the blocklist to go somewhere locally manageable as Transmission uses its own blocklist directory in .config. I believe there are about 10 lists there now. It works well for my needs. It can be ran weekly using crontab in standard user profile. To download: blocklist-update.sh To download the others: Github
Vivaldi Technologies, a company
based in Norway, is the company behind the Vivaldi browser. The
Vivaldi browser was built with Power users, or technology enthusiasts
in mind. It has all the features of Chrome, Firefox, and others with
a little something extra. The browser is best suited for people who
know what they want, how they want it. Vivaldi started out with a
Tech Preview and since its beginning has ran more like a stable
release. The browser was meant to replace Opera legacy. It was built
in the wake of changes in Opera Software, the changes that Jon Von
Tetzchner, didn’t agree with. He was mad after Opera shut down
their old community website and he felt that Opera the browser was no
more, he felt that the company sold out and so he left Opera and
reopened the community site and started to form Vivaldi.
Vivaldi has more built in
features than you might really think is necessary, however, where
they are heading, these features will come in handy. Vivaldi is an
unfinished product, but a very sturdy one. Vivaldi uses Blink, the
latest Chromium engine and many of its libraries. Say what you might
about Google, but next to Mozilla, they have done the most to advance
the web. Vivaldi uses a closed source UI which has some people
questioning its loyalty to its users, however, Most of what Vivaldi
have advanced since releasing the browser has been Merely to the UI
and not the inner workings of the browser. Changes made to the UI
were adding of tab stacking and audio control in active and inactive
tabs, Vivaldi’s own theme support, the ability to switch the
placement of the bookmarks bar, the side bar, etc. and more control
over browser history. They also added possible hotkeys and mouse
gestures.
Vivaldi browser stays up to date
with the latest Chrome updates. They do not lag behind like with
browsers such as Srware Iron and they do not add hidden proprietary
software like with Comodo’s browsers and even Chromium itself.
Chromium is the open source project behind Google-Chrome, this means
that Vivaldi is largely open sourced, the company just likes to keep
a lock on their interface. The browser looks reminiscent of Opera in
its earlier days, back when the company was loyal to the community it
started with. Vivaldi does listen to its users, it may take time to
implement much wanted features, but they do try to make good on their
word.
Vivaldi has recently started a
personal blogging site on its community page for its users much like Blogger for Google. They have also released an online email client,
but I have yet to verify how well it works. They are also currently
working on a sync feature, this will put it at a tipping point against Chrome, many users who feel stuck on Chrome will now have two browser
options to move away from Chrome to. As for privacy, the browser does
allow some data collection to Google, but this is just standard for
features such as safe browsing and these can be turned on and off in
the browser’s UI easily. Vivaldi is quick to render pages, feels
even quicker than Chromium, however, that could be placebo. Vivaldi
supports nearly all of the Chromium extensions now.
One issue I have with Vivaldi,
it takes longer to fire up than even Google-Chrome does. Loading the
browser requires a bit more CPU cycles and time than with other
browsers, however, if it remains constant and stable, that might not
really matter to new users. It looks and feels amazing as a browser.
The browser’s slogan is “It’s your web. Surf it the way you
want” as printed on their site: https://vivaldi.com.
As you can see, I have their
homepage opened now which displays many of their unique features over
other browsers right on the front page. It also gives links to the
Community page, the news, the forum and the webmail. Here is to
Another great year with Vivaldi, let’s hope the next year finds
even more improvements.
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