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Received — 2020年9月10日 ガジェット系

デスクトップ版Vivaldi 3.3、休憩モードが利用可能に

著者: nagazou
2020年9月10日 15:05
headless 曰く、

デスクトップ版Vivaldi 3.3に休憩モードが追加された(Vivaldiのブログ記事日本語版記事Ghacksの記事The Registerの記事)。

休憩モードを有効にするには、ステータスバー左側の一時停止ボタン(休憩する)をクリックすればいい。休憩中は同じボタンが再生ボタン(休憩終了)に変わるので、再びクリックすると通常の表示に戻る。デフォルトでショートカットキーに Ctrl + . が割り当てられているが、変更することも可能だ。

休憩モードではすべてのコンテンツが非表示となり、メディア再生も一時停止する。この状態でタブを切り替えたり閉じたりすることは可能だが、枠だけの表示になるため実用的ではない。休憩モードはアプリをいったん終了して再開するのとは異なり、再開時にページの再読み込みが発生しないメリットがある。メディアは休憩モードに入った位置から自動で再生が再開される。

Vivaldiによれば、休憩モードを活用することで仕事と生活のバランスを保ち、ワークフローを改善するほか、友人や家族、同僚との直接的な対話が進むようになるという。また、仕事上の機密情報を一時的に表示されないようにすることや、通信などのリソースを節約して他のアプリでの作業に集中できるようにすることも可能とのことだ。

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関連ストーリー:
WebブラウザVivaldi、関西弁ネイティブスピーカー・ボランティア翻訳者を募集 2019年11月21日
Chrome派生のBraveブラウザ、Chromeの広告ブロック仕様変更に反対し独自に高速なAPIを実装 2019年07月04日
Vivaidiのシェア、IE6に迫る 2018年11月09日
Vivaldi 1.14、リーダービューで縦書き表示をサポート 2018年02月03日

Is Virtual Burning Man the Internet's Ultimate Test?

著者: BeauHD
2020年9月10日 07:40
An anonymous reader shares an opinion piece from The New York Times, written by Neil Shister, author of "Radical Ritual: How Burning Man Changed the World." Here's an excerpt: In perhaps the ultimate test of whether the internet can satisfyingly replicate the real world, Burning Man has gone online this year. The notion isn't as much of a mismatch as it might seem. Larry Harvey, who helped start Burning Man on a San Francisco beach in 1986 and was its guiding luminary until his death in 2018, saw himself as a social engineer. He envisioned a landscape of limitless possibility where people could, at least temporarily, liberate themselves from the numbing confines of commodified art, entertainment and even lifestyle. What has more limitless possibility -- in theory, anyway -- than the internet? Indeed, a community famous for innovation (some trace the origins of maker culture to Burning Man) and deeply endowed with tech wizardry (Elon Musk famously said Burning Man "is Silicon Valley") adapted to the pandemic by creating a virtual Burning Man known as the Multiverse. The weeklong assemblage of eight digital platforms, which anyone can view free, went live at 12:01 a.m. on the last Monday in August, the traditional time Black Rock City (the name of the makeshift town where Burning Man takes place) opens its gates with a burst of fireworks. The Multiverse maintains much of the energy, abundance and wonder of the real thing. One's cursor wanders among detailed renditions of Black Rock City that, for anyone who has been there, are eerily familiar: the layout of the camps, the signature structures and the cracked desert floor. Hover over an icon on the screen and the avatar of a Burner appears playing music he or she programmed. Digital art pieces installed by Burners surface when you click on planted flags. Visitors move through the Temple, an island of spiritual contemplation amid the playa's cacophony, by connecting glowing colored orbs into meditative patterns. You can attend workshops, which often include chat rooms for serendipitous encounters. But what's missing are adequate simulations of the vulnerability, discomfort and gratitude so central to Burning Man's existential qualities. Those fabled personal transformations typically arise from reappraisals of the self-image you brought to Black Rock City. You discover more creativity, self-reliance, flexibility, generosity -- even love -- than you thought you possessed. Or less. "You don't always get the Burn you want," a playa adage goes, "but you always get the Burn you need." Black Rock City continually serves up opportunities to examine one's internal guidance system. The Multiverse doesn't offer this kind of introspection. There's no app that replicates the dread of loneliness or the relief of forgiveness -- familiar emotions at Burning Man. Which isn't to say that won't happen someday. As artificial-reality techniques advance, as the psychodynamics of cyberspace become more sophisticated in integrating the brain with virtual technology, it may one day be possible to elicit feelings associated with the self-governance, communal trust, gifting and fun that make Burning Man such a singular experience.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Vivaldi Browser Adds a Pause Button For the Internet

著者: BeauHD
2020年9月10日 05:40
It can be hard to tear yourself away from the never-ending stream of content provided by the internet, so Vivaldi decided to make taking a break easier by introducing a pause button. PCMag reports: Version 3.3 of the Vivaldi browser introduces a new feature called "Break Mode." Rather than having to close your browser, Break Mode allows you to effectively pause your access to the internet with a button press. Once installed, Vivaldi 3.3 displays a pause button on the status bar. When pressed, Break Mode is engaged, which "mutes and stops HTML5 audio and videos, hides all tabs, panels, and other content leaving the screen clean." It's also possible to trigger Break Mode with the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + "." and to activate it via the browser's Quick Commands. The Vivaldi team sees it as a way of allowing you to "interact with the physical world" while at the same time not having to remember which tabs you had open or what you were viewing when you're ready to return. Pressing the pause button again resumes access just as you left it. Break Mode also acts as a very simple and quick way to hide what you were doing on the internet, which could come in very handy seeing as we're spending so much more time at home together. Other new features include more options for customizing themes as well as adding a new "Private" theme, highlighting base domains to help identify malicious web pages, easier cropping of URLs in the address bar making it easier to visit different parts of a website, and enhancements to the built-in tracker and ad blocker allowing whole pages to be easily blocked.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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