Recs.
Updated
Vivaldi is a Chromium based browser with its UI written with web technologies (HTML/JS). Vivaldi advertises itself as a "power-user browser" as it tries to bring features built-in reducing the number of extensions needed.
Vivaldi was founded by Jón S. von Tetzchner, creator of Opera browser and its CEO until before the switch to Chromium.
SpecsUpdate
Pros
Pro Built-in ad and tracker blocker
Vivaldi has a built-in blocker that allows you to select between blocking just trackers or both trackers and ads. With customizable blocking list sources, good performance, and support for all the standard blocker list features you find in ad blocker extensions (with more to come), you might not need an ad blocker extension at all.
This also comes in handy on Android, where Chromium/Vivaldi doesn't support extensions.
Pro Notes
A notes panel allows to save notes from webpages and can include screenshots for reference and have tags and organized in folders to help manage them. Thumbnails are too small and Notes do not have separate page in settings, but it should, there are a lot of things to improve.
Cons
Con Some non-optional telemetry
According to its privacy policy, Vivaldi sends an approximate location (country or major city), randomized ID, version, cpu architecture, screen resolution (to know what screen sizes to test on) and time since last message every 24 hours (to know amount of active users).