For years China’s been toying with the idea of building a massive bus that straddles multiple lanes of cars to move…
For years China’s been toying with the idea of building a massive bus that straddles multiple lanes of cars to move…
Last time we checked in on renowned Steam demigod PalmDesert, he’d just pushed his Steam level to 600. At the time,…
Obviously this guy doesn’t deserve to be threatened. However, the review is laughably bad. He barely “reviews” anything. He doesn’t even talk about gameplay, says some vague things about the graphics while somehow not discussing the technical fidelity. It reads like a hastily written movie review.
To answer your questions, Vivaldi is built on top of Chromium. Many add-ons that work on Chrome also work here. You can go to the Chrome web store and install them if you want.
Learning about windows key + right or left has honestly changed my life. I do SO much data entry and it has made my 8+ hour work day much more efficient.
2. Side-by-side browsing: Huh? Windows do this for left and right. Just use window key and arrow keys. And....that’s it.
1. start typing, and you can quickly search the web, your recent history, and your bookmarks. It’s similar to the way the Chrome omnibox works, but the F2 keyboard shortcut makes it even easier to use.
> Why would anyone with a Mac not use Safari?
*Most* people don’t use Macs. I’m sorry if you’re offended, but it’s a fact based on market saturation. That’s why the article doesn’t say *all*.
TIL I’m obviously not a power user of the web browser. These seem like such niche features.
This looks awesome but the last thing I need is help with organising my tabs so I can have more
Was wondering what was going on, because only the homepage was in Russian and says I’m not logged in, but still have access too and could play games from my library. Friends List is weird too, shows my friends in main window, but game pages show a slew of different people I’ve never heard of...lol
You get nothing and lose almost everything, it's a bad deal
WD-40 was first used by the military in the '50s to clean up Atlas missile parts. Today, it's used by people…