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
For people in 2018 who are looking for a fast, stable, and flexible
browser, Vivaldi more than does its share in that department. Vivaldi
is a browser built by Norse company Vivaldi AS in Oslo, Norway.
Vivaldi hasn’t been around as long, it was only released in 2016,
but even at time of release, many users found it to be almost on par
with every other long-lived and stable browser on the market. Vivaldi
is built on open source software Chromium, with a more proprietary
finish on top. They often rely on chromium codecs or codecs found on
your system to handle playback, for this reason, Vivaldi might take
some tweaking to get fully working on some Arch systems. I recently stated in a previous blog article that Vivaldi didn't significantly make changes to Chromium's underlying code, however I didn't say they didn't make changes, obviously they do make minor ones in order to get their code to work with the changes made in the browser at each update. The founder is hoping that in the future, Chromium will work more closely with them for the sake of the release. He wishes for there to be a more fluent merging of the two softwares.
Vivaldi doesn’t track its users, the founder of Vivaldi was the
co-founder of Opera and many of his beliefs during his time at Opera
came to Vivaldi with him. In Norway, there are stronger regulations
dealing with tracking and the like as opposed to the United States.
Not to get too political in this review, but the founder of Vivaldi
himself has been cited saying that there needs to be better
regulation with regards to the immense level of tracking that goes on
these days. Note, Vivaldi doesn’t track users, however, they do
collect platform information to determine the userbase across
Windows, Mac and Linux, if this bothers you, you can choose another
browser, but most browsers these days collect copious amounts of
data.
Vivaldi browser is feature rich out of the box, something that many
browsers today are lacking, it has innovation, changeable and
configurable interface design. The browser at time of writing is
based on Chromium 64, the latest version to date. Both versions of
Vivaldi have that in common. Yes, for those who want bleeding edged
software, Vivaldi has a Snapshot option that caters to you.
Vivaldi-Snapshot features all the usual configurations and tab
stacking with the added sync feature. Sync is a feature that Opera
has had for a while now and Vivaldi only recently started
implementing it. The reason was always that Vivaldi wanted to do it
correctly before passing it on to mainstream. As far as I can tell,
the feature really does do what it says. I have yet to notice any
complications. The browser opens quick in the new Snapshot version
which is version 1.15 on their website(my version is 1.15.1099.3).
For all other users, there is a 1.14 version that is currently the
stable channel.
Upon start up, Vivaldi has a quick setup menu which runs you through
a few steps to make Vivaldi look the way you want it to, but it
doesn’t go very in depth. To get more settings, you have to click
on the V icon in the Left-top-corner of the browser window and go to
Tools > Settings. The Settings dialogue pops up with various
settings. Each configuration has its own separate tab. Themes,
Appearance, Start Page, etc. Under appearance, I usually check the box
that allows settings to open in a new tab. This will make settings
take a full page next time. If you want performance over crazy
effects and features, the settings tab under Appearance might also
have benefits for you, This tab also lets you set or unset animations
and use native window management(Adds a native looking border around
window). This might be helpful on lower spec systems. Also disabling
fast forward buttons in address bar might help as well.
When it comes to features, Vivaldi definitely has something for
everyone, a browser built with power users in mind. Vivaldi also
offers keyboard and mouse gestures. The browser allows for tab
stacking and rearranging which is something that other browsers don’t
seem to have at the current moment. Vivaldi has a function that
controls audio in tabs, but sadly, doesn’t let you pause background
tabs which play video out right. To do this, you kind of have to go
into the tab bar and right-click and look for Hibernate Background
Tabs option. This will essentially slowdown, or completely stop
running tabs in the background which is fantastic if RAM and
processor power are important to you. Vivaldi is definitely a fine
replacement for Chrome and Firefox as of 2018. For more information,
go to their website, link below.
Link to previous Article: https://draft.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=6840776953994833309#editor/target=post;postID=4093950101559536072;onPublishedMenu=allposts;onClosedMenu=allposts;postNum=36;src=postname
Link to Vivaldi's Website: https://vivaldi.com
Link to a podcast featuring Jon von Tetzchner: https://vivaldi.com/blog/jon-speaks-to-the-community/?utm_content=buffer573e9&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=VivaldiSocial
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