Slimmed Down And Refreshed: Sleipnir 4 Browser For Mac
One of the most important pieces of software you will use on your computer is going to be the web browser. There are really three main browser brand names, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer/Edge, and Google Chrome/Chromium. There’s also dozens of smaller third party browsers around to try out. Although Firefox and Chromium are both open source, the majority of third party browsers are based around Chromium and the Blink engine. That Chrome is based around. The two are very similar but Chrome is more like the public version as Chromium is never officially released as a standalone browser. Chrome has extras like a, auto updater and multimedia codecs. Each third party browser developer has its own ideas and either takes things out of Chromium or adds new functions and features in.
There are several functions built into Chromium and Chrome already but today’s internet user often needs more, which has to be taken care of with extensions. A number of third party Chromium based browsers are really pretty similar to standard and offer a few security or privacy tweaks such as removing communication with Google servers. We’re more interested in looking at a browser that enhances the features and functions over and above the standard Chromium, such as, better tab/download/ or even something unique like a built in VPN or DNS encryption.
Here we list seven browsers based on Chromium and the Blink engine that have a bigger feature set and more options than the browser they are developed around. Importantly, the browsers can still directly or indirectly install extensions from the Chrome store, any that can’t were not included.
Vivaldi Vivaldi is the newest big player in the browser market with the stable version released in April 2016. It was created by a former founder and CEO of the original Opera. Unhappy with the direction Opera took after moving from its own Presto engine to Chromium’s Blink, they decided to create a new browser that reintroduces many of the features and functions removed from Opera. As a result, Vivaldi is currently popular among advanced users and geeks. Perhaps the most striking difference Vivaldi has over other browsers is the color changing theme which alters the UI color to match the general color of the current web page.
A very useful space saving feature is the tab stacking which allows you to drop one tab on top of another to group them together. What Vivaldi has in abundance is tons of options to tweak things like appearance, tabs and the address bar to your preference. As it’s still pretty new, Vivaldi should improve further and pick up more options and features as time goes on. I just cant believe that chromium tab management is not an issue for You. That problem is known for years. When asked about limited number of tabs you can open and have a meaningful view of them, Google geniuses replied to users to buy bigger monitors. They are unable/uninterested to add scroll bar/arrows so tabs can fill more than screen width. VIVALDI is THE ONLY Chromium based browser on planet Earth that solved the issue by offering vertical tab position (which is logical solution for wide screen monitors).
When filled it offers scroll bar. You can achieve this in new Firefox via hack. Tab management is essential requirement for me and browsers without it, in my opinion, don’t have any usable value. Thanks a lot I was struggling with firefox.And because i wanted to sync my android chrome browser with my pc browser i had to seek an alternate chromium based browser.And after reading this post and all comments,I decided to give SLIMJET and CENT a try and just wow I like both. SLIMJET is my default browser now.it syncs my pc tabs to my android so well and it also installs chrome extensions with ease.And the best part.It starts instantly right after clicking on my slow 2GB ram pc and works fine even with 15-20 tabs open at which point firefox and chrome freeze for me.
I suggest you make a new list with 2018 updates to above browsers and anything new if you find. Hii,Thanks for reply.I was thinking.that i like the Multifunctionality of Vivaldi browser and extra but useful features of UC browser.(Like cricket score and virtual wifi) But the problem is.these two are just so resource heavy that my old PC cannot handle them.Do you know is there any way to make them work on a slow pc (may be a lite version of these) or any tweaks? I aslo gave Comodo Dragon a try but there is no new tab page. By the way ay present Cent and Slimjet are working pretty good for me. I also heard of Iridium browser (its paid) is it any good? Raymond, any suggestion for lightweight Chromium based browser that is able to use extensions?
Currently, I’m using Yandex browser. It’s working fine, but i dislike the UNREMOVABLE/Unable to uninstall extensions that come bundled into the browser and i barely use it.
Plus, what make it bad is Yandex browser is silently auto update it ( Including silently download “Adobe Flash” into the browser, despite i always deny browser request to download “Adobe Flash” ). I dislike to use “Adobe Flash” for security reason. Sorry for bad English, since English is not my native language. I just installed an Open Source Iridium Browser after browsing and googling several website and doing my own search. What i like most is, this browser is able to install Extension from Chrome Web Store and there is no bloatware bundled and pre-install together. Althought i can’t say much about the browser since i just use it. They claimed that this browser is “to enhance the privacy of the user and make sure that the latest and best secure technologies are used”, thought i feel it’s just same as using normal Chrome.
I use Maxthon for many years already. But 4, 4.9 not their 5, 5 newest version which I really don`t like and is completely different looking – a kind of heavy X-mas tree without air and with too much useless functions. I noticed they press now to switch to 5 and the older 4 starting sometimes to freeze But it`s really fast, customizable, cloud syncronization too etc. Even if based on older chrome version – I think there are antiviruses for protection too Of course, I read many will avoid it keeping their private data on it since it`s based in China (although is not the only one, there are a lot used and based there!). In general these Chromium browsers, from some mentioned here I use sometimes yandex, used vivaldi too (but noticed has not any mail option there like in old Opera presto), I noticed they spend too much CPU. Citrio, by the way, is treated like spam – you can find on internet about. The same about web UC Browser, installation is blocked by Eset Nod antivirus.

Sleipnir is really too heavy for me – I like their old version when was half Trident, half Mozilla and had a valid RSS ticker! Slimjet crashes often and Opera became really bad, is not anymore what was before – without to announce, they even deleted my account on their forum I used to login in Opera Link, syncronize bookmarks and had it from the time of their web operamail! Instead, I prefer and liked a lot presto based Opera, even now many pages may look incompatible with newest standards. I agree on Maxthon. After a year or two of growing increasingly frustrated with Firefox and Chrome (as well as my usual AV) I realized I’d been married to certain programs for no real reason other than my hatred of IE, Mcafee, Norton, etc. And I would just kinda put up with them because they were better by comparison. Every few months or so I reset my laptop to factory so I decided I would take that state as an opportunity to try something different.
My intent was to download nothing but new browsers, av, utilities, etc. Each time and keep them for the entire few months, never repeating programs until I’d tested everything that wasn’t straight-up scamware. Maxthon ruined that pretty fast. I loved it during the cycle I had it and didn’t care for any of the 3 browsers I had downloaded on the next one.
After I couple weeks I decided I needed Maxthon back. It never crashed (nor did Shockwave, a daily occurence on Chrome at the time) never ate up memory and the “resource sniffer” was indispensable. Plus, certain flash games that chugged along with literally EVERY browser I tried (and we’re talking around 30) ran so fast on Maxthon I felt like I was playing them on fast forward! Unfortunately it has gone waaaaay downhill the past year or 2, with constant crashes and really bizarre lockups. I don’t even bother installing it anymore but it never occurred to me to go back to an older build. I think I will try that now as this current lineup (Chromium, Citrio and Waterfox) isn’t cutting it.
@HAL9000 Thanks very much for your informative article. Before I read this, I had just switched to Slimjet and couldn’t be happier. For me Chrome had become a hog despite their recent efforts to minimize memory. It;s interesting that you showed the screenshots of Taskmanager comparing Vivaldi and Slimjet, because I compared most of them that way and Slimjet came out as using the least amount of memeory. In fact – for me -almost 1/3 compared to Chrome. I’ve tried most browsers listed except for UC and for now – for me- it’s Slimjet all the way. I know, other people will have different requirements, but for me the difference in speed is very noticeable.
Vivaldi all the way. Every single person to whom I have shown it, has gone home, uninstalled the data-stealing, privacy ignoring Chrome and installed Vivaldi instead. These are not ‘power users’ or ‘geeks’, they are ordinary people whom are fed up with companies such as Google from monetising their lives.
I do not understand why you (and others) keep referring to Vivaldi as a browser for ‘geeks’ and ‘power-users’. If having a few extra options available to change your browsing experience is ‘geeky’ then we’re all in trouble as our collective IQ has obviously dropped by several points;-) Also worth noting that it was ‘geeks’ whom first brought Chrome to the general populace’s attention (I was one of those whom was at that time fooled by Google’s declaration of ‘do no evil’), but very few people (including yourselves describe it as a geek’s browser! I’m not claiming that Google doesn’t have a right to fund itself, but as what is basically the largest advertising entity on the planet, it’s not short of a dollar or two.
Focused specific advertising is a dangerous thing in my view, more akin to brainwashing than notifying somebody of your product. But I’m old-fashioned – I still believe in an individual’s rights. As far as I’m aware, Vivaldi has similar privacy settings to Chromium, and Chromium in turn has similar privacy settings to Chrome. I’d be interested to know what you think is so great about Vivaldi’s privacy settings and what is so bad about Chrome’s when they appear to be quite similar Vivaldi is called by myself and many others a browser more for power users and geeks because the average user really doesn’t care that much for customizing things. Vivaldi is advertized as a feature rich and highly customizable browser.
I would bet that ordinary people or those you know that have installed it, either don’t go home and fully customize it or don’t even use most of the features available. Sure, anyone can simply install Vivaldi and leave it at default settings and it will work fine, but you and I both know that is not what the browser was designed for.;). FF/PM got their tab functionality ideas from an old version of Opera – the same place where they found most of their ‘innovations’. (speed-dial, tabbed browsing, address bar search and many, many more.). It would be nice of them to make it clear that very few of Mozilla’s ‘innovations’ actually came from in-house.
Slimmed Down And Refreshed Sleipnir 4 Browser For Mac Osx
Regards PM, I haven’t used it in a while, does it still leak memory like a sieve? And did they fix those security issues they were having surrounding online purchases made through their browser? Apart from that I kind of liked it. You know, until something much, much better came on the scene. I’ve been using Vivaldi ever since:-). Thanks for trying Ghost.
Current pricing is $10/month or $60/year. Free version is not cut down. It’s actually fully featured with limitations – not uncommon for productivity tools. We’ve decided to use a freemium model, like most productivity tools do, rather than monetizing by tracking your every move on line or stuffing ads into your browsing experience, like most free browsers do.
We feel that being beholden to our user-customers, we can build a better product than if we are beholden to our advertiser-customers. Since it saves you 10-15 minutes a few times a day, the productivity gains for anyone charging over $5/hour for their professional services that are performed in a browser, are definitely recouped. We think it’s fair and so do all of our premium users. Turns out “People are not going to pay any money for a browser” isn’t really trueit’s a challenge changing the mindset for sure. But people are starting to see the value. We’re not the only ones with a premium version so I think this is more of a shift than an impossible.
Thanks for the mention @Its-A Me. Thanks for your input Larry, your free version is cut down because it is a restricted version of a full product, that by its very nature means a “cut down” version. Err, which free browsers stuff ads into your browsing experience?
While I applaud your efforts to create a different product, by charging a not inconsiderable fee of between $60-$120 per year (your browser itself quoted me $250) rules out 99.999% of users. There’s also free and much cheaper paid Chrome addons that do a similar thing to your multi login. Your talk of saving professional people xx amount of minutes or money per day is highly subjective and only a small fraction of people will likely find any real value in paying for it. If that is what you are aiming for, then great and good luck to you.
But IMO, a paid browser is not going to reach mainstream in this day and age and will remain a niche browser with a small (and possibly loyal) following. @HAL9000, thanks for the review.
Chromium developers had removed the Disable DirectWrite since v53. Therefore, all fonts now renders only by DirectWrite. Existed the “#disable-direct-write” flag’s the last build is 52.0.2718 or before builds.
Many based-Chromium browsers did impressed by removing Disable DirectWrite. Just as I guessed, many users has been react to this revert. If you can take a peek to Google-Opera-Vivaldi forums, you should read out there which it’s negative comments and “bring back to Disable DirectWrite” requests.
Neither Chromium developers nor Opera nor Vivaldi care about requests, complaints by users. Why I don’t like DirectWrite rendering. It’s fonts tasterized as anti-aliasing style which it is fuzzy, blurry and hurts my eyes (not only me!). Therefore, I’d stuck at old version of Chrome. After I discovered Cent Browser. In this browser “added back disabling Direct Write”.
Of course, the Browser’s contains many useful features but for me, above all main priorirty is DisableDirectWrite feature. I try to inform everyone about the Cent Browser. I wish, its would be often update but implementing of the features to last stable Chromium engine couldn’t easy.
Opera with its latest update (41.0.2353.5) appears to have gone in the crapper. I had been using it past 2 years no issue, but just last weekend I got a new SSD and did a fresh install of Windows 7 and after all the updates installed Opera. Right away it would crash seconds after loading a page and would constantly ask if I wanted to make it default and checking yes or dont ask again had no effect. Removing, cleaning the registry and reinstalling fixed nothing. Rolling back to the previous version worked fine and Chrome also worked fine. Sad because I much prefer it to Chrome. Hopefully they can get back on track.
Yes, Torch was intentionally left out because there are some things about it I just don’t like. Firstly it gets flagged by a lot of security software as malicious because it contains an adware extension. Although it can be removed people shouldn’t have to disable their antivirus to be able to download a browser. Secondly I’m just not sure about the music and games add-ons. The music especially looks a bit iffy on its content. I realise it comes from sites like YouTube but just about all of it looks like copyrighted material to me.
Design with purpose down to the last pixel The designer at Fenrir Inc. Designed the Web browser from absolute scratch to make the Web for people a more personal and stress-free experience. As a result, we were able to place the number of advanced features such as the easy to view thumbnails that display pages and the evolved search fields that can find open pages in no time into the breathtakingly beautiful and simple toolbar. Each part of the bold looking design has a purpose. We will introduce to you some of them below.
Gestures that captivate you the moment you touch The bothersome task of aiming for a small button with your cursor is unheard in Sleipnir. You can simply slide the mouse while holding down the right-click button of your mouse to close tabs, go back, and more.
Furthermore, because you just need to move your finger tips, bothersome keyboard operations and even just moving the cursor is not necessary. Even if you are holding a mug of coffee or resting your cheek in one hand, you can continue to browse the Web just like usual. Quickly find open tabs even when they reach 100 Compared with the time we first embraced tabs in Web browsers, it is becoming more and more common to simultaneously open a number of pages such as Web applications and social networking. Sleipnir has been carefully designed in every nook and corner so that you can quickly find the page you want from all the rest.
Whether you have 100 tabs opened or not a single tab open, you can find your desired page in no time at all. Please take a look at just a part of these conceptions. Design with purpose down to the last pixel The designer of Sleipnir 4 for Mac designed the Web browser from absolute scratch to make the Web for people a more personal and stress-free experience. As a result, we were able to place the number of advanced features such as the easy to view thumbnails that display pages and the evolved search fields that can find open pages in no time into the breathtakingly beautiful and simple toolbar. Each part of the bold looking design has a purpose.
We will introduce to you some of them below. Gestures that captivate you the moment you touch The bothersome task of aiming for a small button with your cursor is unheard in Sleipnir. You can simply use touch gestures with Magic Mouse or the Track Pad to close tabs, go back, and more. Furthermore, because you just need to move your finger tips, bothersome keyboard operations and even just moving the cursor is not necessary.
Even if you are holding a mug of coffee or resting your cheek in one hand, you can continue to browse the Web just like usual. Quickly find open tabs even when they reach 100 Compared with the time we first embraced tabs in Web browsers, it is becoming more and more common to simultaneously open a number of pages such as Web applications and social networking. Sleipnir has been carefully designed in every nook and corner so that you can quickly find the page you want from all the rest. Whether you have 100 tabs opened or not a single tab open, you can find your desired page in no time at all.
Please take a look at just a part of these conceptions. Thumbnail tabs to understand what is inside Tabs originally became smaller and smaller the more you open them making the shrunken title not very useful for telling what a page is. Sleipnir displays thumbnails of pages in the easiest to use location within the tool bar. This makes it possible to open more Web services and sites in a way that is easy to see and use. Unique scrolling easy to view even when overflowing with tabs In order to maintain to be easy-to-find and beautiful even when many tabs are opened, the scrolling actions have been carefully designed in Sleipnir. The unique scrolling where tabs hide away while piling up on both sides is a creative expression so that you don't feel tabs are vanishing away when overflowing.
Why the address bar should be removed These days, rather than directly inputting addresses(URLs), users are much more likely to perform searches or open bookmarks. Regardless of this, general browsers have a large box for inputting addresses occupying the majority of the tool bar. Sleipnir has boldly rearranged these elements, obtaining both modern logic and simple beauty. Luxury of browsing the Web with beautiful text on PC too Browsers until now only displayed characters as rough dots. However, those jagged characters are already retrogressive. Through the font rendering, repeatedly independently modified, the original beauty of text has been extracted to the full. From today on, you can browse the Web in luxury with beautiful, easy-to-read text on par with professional graphics tools.
In Sleipnir to the right, text is beautifully displayed Portal Field finds pages from just typing 4 characters With Portal Field you can find the pages you want to open immediately after typing just 4 characters. The unorganized branched-out pages often found in past browsers have been scrapped for a compact easy-to-view list of suggestions uniquely designed to be sorted by site. You can use it to directly jump to the site you were thinking of with the least possible effort. The amazingly slim just 54 pixel toolbar Through designing what a Web browser should like from scratch, we have also made a more compact tool bar. The tool bar far narrower than all of the other main browsers makes it possible to view the screen with plenty of room without getting in the way of your Web browsing. Regardless of how thumbnails have been displayed until now, this super slim and beautiful Sleipnir can be called the evolution of the Web browser.
Accurately and quickly close tabs without small buttons I wonder how far have you moved your cursor to press the small spec of a close button. With the original touch gestures of Sleipnir you can close tabs by simply drawing an L character like when scrolling like usual. There is also a variety of other touch gestures available such as for going back and forward, reloading, restoring closed tabs, and more. This makes it possible to make smart use of tabs with your finger tips from now on. Elaborately adjusted gestures Touch gestures are very delicate functions that feel completely different by the slightest change in finger movement. The engineer of Sleipnir made sure to thoroughly polish up all the gestures so that the timing and animation of actions, cancel method, and more operate in a pleasant and accurate way.

They are something so pleasant and unheard of that you will want to use them straight away. Operate tabs with just your fingertips with a touch screen If you use a PC with a touch screen, you can use Sleipnir by directly touching the screen with your fingertips. When flicking,the tabs that can be consecutively switched between are light and fast as if turning through a book. Plus, the drag down a tab to close FlickWipe, etc. That you may be familiar with from Sleipnir Mobile, are light and enjoyable to use, making the most of the touch screen. Open, read, close all with one hand Touch gestures only become a useful function because they have everything experienced has been perfectly designed. For example, in Sleipnir, all you have to do in order to open links in new tabs is hold down on them.
If there are some words you want to find out more about you can by just selecting them. Furthermore, tabs can be switched between with touch gestures. Because all the operations have been designed so that you can use them while relaxing with just one hand, this new sense of unity has now become available. Open tabs one after another with just one hand and flick to switch tabs. Tabs are bound together to find them in one glance With the original way that tabs are aligned in rows, the more they increase the harder they become to tell apart.
The tabs in Sleipnir are kept together and bound by relation so that they have become dramatically easier to find. Furthermore, you only need to drag to bind tabs. Related tabs are automatically sorted Binding tabs can be achieved simply by dragging, but even that is not necessary when tabs such as those opened from links and displayed to the side are obviously related. Sleipnir automatically binds related tabs. Furthermore, when you start to close bound tabs you are finished with, you are cleverly shown the next tab you should look at. Tabs that sort themselves out can only be found in Sleipnir. Instantly use whenever if left open Are you repeatedly opening the same bookmarks every day?
If you leave open the pages you visit tomorrow and so on, you can instantly access them without having to even bother opening them. Sleipnir is designed so that you can quickly find your desired tab even when many are left open. For example, protect so tabs don't close, and badges being attached to bookmarked tabs to understand them in a glance. Find the latest information you can't find yourself When you open a new tab in Sleipnir, you will come across something that you may find a little surprising. You can find new articles of sites you often visit in the new tab page.
Sleipnir recommends you pages to visit based on your usual Web browsing. The more you use it the more interesting latest information can be obtained. Recommended articles are generated locally so there are no privacy concerns. Thumbnail tabs to understand what is inside Tabs originally became smaller and smaller the more you open them making the shrunken title not very useful for telling what a page is. Sleipnir displays thumbnails of pages in the easiest to use location within the tool bar.
This makes it possible to open more Web services and sites in a way that is easy to see and use. Why the address bar should be removed These days, rather than directly inputting addresses(URLs), users are much more likely to perform searches or open bookmarks. Regardless of this, general browsers have a large box for inputting addresses occupying the majority of the tool bar. Sleipnir has boldly rearranged these elements, obtaining both modern logic and simple beauty. The truly evolved address bar and search bar We think you can not call 'an address bar that can also search' an address bar that is merged together with a search bar.
Sleipnir has been prepared with 'Portal Field' for finding open pages in no time at all. Searches, bookmarks, previously viewed pages, addresses, you can immediately open the pages you want to open from here. Portal Field finds pages from just typing 4 characters With Portal Field you can find the pages you want to open immediately after typing just 4 characters.
The unorganized branched-out pages often found in past browsers have been scrapped for a compact easy-to-view list of suggestions uniquely designed to be sorted by site. You can use it to directly jump to the site you were thinking of with the least possible effort. The amazingly slim just 54 pixel toolbar Through designing what a Web browser should like from scratch, we have also made a more compact tool bar. The tool bar far narrower than all of the other main browsers makes it possible to view the screen with plenty of room without getting in the way of your Web browsing.
Regardless of how thumbnails have been displayed until now, this super slim and beautiful Sleipnir can be called the evolution of the Web browser. Accurately and quickly close tabs without small buttons I wonder how far have you moved your cursor to press the small spec of a close button. With the original touch gestures of Sleipnir you can close tabs by simply drawing an L character like when scrolling like usual. There is also a variety of other touch gestures available such as for going back and forward, reloading, restoring closed tabs, and more. This makes it possible to make smart use of tabs with your finger tips from now on. Elaborately adjusted gestures Touch gestures are very delicate functions that feel completely different by the slightest change in finger movement.
The engineer of Sleipnir made sure to thoroughly polish up all the gestures so that the timing and animation of actions, cancel method, and more operate in a pleasant and accurate way. They are something so pleasant and unheard of that you will want to use them straight away. The iPhone feeling that you'll want to touch Sleipnir for Mac is being handled by the same team that develops the app highly acclaimed in App Store called Sleipnir Mobile for iPhone / iPad. The nurtured finger tip operation feeling from the iPhone / iPad version can also be put to use for lightweight and easy of use on the Mac version too.
The functions you are so used to on the iPhone / iPad version such as the way tabs switch in a beautiful flowing motion when scrolling from side to side can be used just like usual. Open, read, close all with one hand Touch gestures only become a useful function because they have everything experienced has been perfectly designed. For example, in Sleipnir, all you have to do in order to open links in new tabs is hold down on them. If there are some words you want to find out more about you can by just selecting them. Furthermore, tabs can be switched between with touch gestures. Because all the operations have been designed so that you can use them while relaxing with just one hand, this new sense of unity has now become available.
Open tabs one after another with just one hand and flick to switch tabs Gestures with an old fashioned mouse too Do you still use an old fashioned mouse that doesn't detect touch movements? In Sleipnir, if you hold down the right-click button and move the mouse you can perform operations just like with touch gestures. Of course, you can a regular mouse, a track ball or whatever your desired pointing device is as long as it has a right-click button to smoothly perform touch gestures.
Tabs are bound together to find them in one glance With the original way that tabs are aligned in rows, the more they increase the harder they become to tell apart. The tabs in Sleipnir are kept together and bound by relation so that they have become dramatically easier to find. Furthermore, you only need to drag to bind tabs. Related tabs are automatically sorted Binding tabs can be achieved simply by dragging, but even that is not necessary when tabs such as those opened from links and displayed to the side are obviously related. Sleipnir automatically binds related tabs.
Furthermore, when you start to close bound tabs you are finished with, you are cleverly shown the next tab you should look at. Tabs that sort themselves out can only be found in Sleipnir. Clean up straight away when overlooking your tabs You can quickly manage tabs when you use TiledTab made for overlooking all your tabs so that you can quickly close and bind them. In TiledTab, bound tabs are displayed like folders, and can be closed in one go when finished with. A large number of tabs that you don't need can be easily closed so that the tab bar is always neat and tidy. Instantly go back to the last tab When you check you e-mails while browsing or do some shopping while checking SNS, returning to the previous tab after taking a little detour can be really bothersome. However, with tab switch of Sleipnir, regardless of where your tabs are located, you can find them based on the order you viewed pages.
You can quickly use it with the same standard Mac windows switching Command + F1. If you want to see the tab you were looking at, there is no need to search for the tab bar anymore. Find the latest information you can't find yourself When you open a new tab in Sleipnir, you will come across something that you may find a little surprising. You can find new articles of sites you often visit in the new tab page. Sleipnir recommends you pages to visit based on your usual Web browsing. The more you use it the more interesting latest information can be obtained.
Recommended articles are generated locally so there is no privacy issues to worry about. Differences with Mac App Store version The Mac App Store version of Sleipnir has had to remove some basic features due to restrictions because of the Mac App Store. If you want to quickly use all the features available, we recommend installing the Sleipnir (Black Edition) on this page. Of course, both versions of Sleipnir are completely free. About the uniqueness of each of the Sleipnir platforms Sleipnir is individually designed for each platform in order to pursue a form that best fits that platform. Please enjoy the design truly optimized for Mac not found in other Web browsers.
About extensions Sleipnir for Mac is a modern Web browser finely designed down to the last pixel. Because of this, extensions are not currently supported. However, we are always looking for ways to beautifully bring to life the extensions you love. If there are any extensions you like, please request them from the form below.