Mozilla Thunderbird 0.1 Released 401
An anonymous reader submits: The Mozilla Thunderbird (stand-alone Mozilla based mail/news reader) developers have just released their first milestone: version 0.1, available for Mac
Linux,
Mac OS X
and Windows. The v0.1 release notes highlight some of the bigger features like customizable toolbars, UI extensions, contact manager sidebar, simplified UI, 3-pane mail window option, and spell checker. Also of note, Mozilla's usage share has risen from 1.2% in February to 1.6% now, a 33% improvement!"
Wild Irish Rose (Score:2, Funny)
blakespot
I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:5, Informative)
Linux distribution is quite good, it won't take over from Evolution just yet.
It's a good start. Remember, people, before you start posting whines about things not working, remember, this is a 0.1 release.
Re:I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:2)
Re:I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm... I wonder why that could be...
Re:I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:3, Insightful)
It was easy to configure, unfortunately it still reeks of "I-look-like-netscape"ocity (a problem plauging mozilla).
Assuming you're referring to the default theme looking like Netscape 4... you do realize you can easily change the theme, right?
Or, if you're referring to Mozilla looking like more recent versions of Netscape (which has been killed now anyway..), well, uh, they're based on Mozilla, so... do you want Mozilla to try to avoid looking like itself?
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:2, Interesting)
The problem is it feels like Mozilla. Monolithic, megalithic, slow and hard on the resources. Of course, it looks crappy, too.
I so wish I could support some open-source-collaborative browser, but Mozilla and its spinoffs (like Firebird) seem to be the only alternative -and I don't happen to agree at all with the direction the browser development is going. Seemingly they (and most of the
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:3, Informative)
I believe this is a moot point. The default theme is horrid, I agree, but there are a variety of themes to choose from at http://themes.mozdev.org [mozdev.org]. <personal_preference>Orbit 3+1 rules!</personal_preference>. And I don't notice Mozilla's speed problems, but I have a top-
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Out of curiosity, what direction would you like them to go in? You praised Opera for being small and fast. The Mozilla project is trying to make Firebird small and fast, just a browser. It seems like they are taking it in the direction you want.
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:3, Offtopic)
Also, Moz is so much more standards compliant. If you've ever tried mak
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: Any OTHER OS browsers? (Score:3, Informative)
Hmmm, well, there's always Dillo [dillo.org] if you're after lean, clean and fast. But Dillo doesn't yet have https support and - while probably at least 95% functional for everyday use - the rendering engine does have difficulties with complex sites. But the browser is ultra-tiny and rocket-fast - oh, and from what they say on the website, it sounds like
Re: Firebird (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, no...but pulling off most of the heavy armor, removing the non-essential systems, pulling off the turret (mail), but realizing it's still a perfectly good cannon, and handing it off to a second team to tweak and make into a mobile artillery platform (Thunderbird) leaves them with a fairly light (in comparison) frame, driven by the same engine that's used t
Re:I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:2)
Re:I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree, XUL is quite fast. Maybe not as fast as assembler, but it's always a trade-off between development time and execution speed. From what I understand of XUL, it provides a layer of abstraction that makes it easier to develop applications, while at the same time not making everything outrageously slow (like java or something).
The reason you think it's slow is because o
Re:I have the pleasure to use this. (Score:5, Informative)
I've so far not experienced a thunderbird crash even though I've been using nightlies until I installed 0.1 this morning.
XUL performs quite well on windows XP and it picks up system colors etc. The only annoying thing is that the Qute theme is a work in progress which means some of the icons are the ugly old netscape icons.
Extensions (Score:5, Informative)
Extensions:
http://extensionroom.mozdev.org/
Re:Extensions (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Extensions (Score:2, Informative)
Mac Linux? (Score:5, Funny)
Mac Linux? That's a gnu one.
(bad-dump-ching!)
Re:Mac Linux? (Score:5, Funny)
Newsreader? Only one test... (Score:3, Funny)
Links (Score:5, Informative)
FAQ and tips at Texturizer [texturizer.net]
Will it import my Mozilla Mail and settings? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Will it import my Mozilla Mail and settings? (Score:2)
Try IMAP (Score:2)
Re:Will it import my Mozilla Mail and settings? (Score:5, Informative)
FWIW, I've been runing Mozilla Mail 1.3 and Thunderbird side by side (using the same profile/email stores) and no problems.
Then don't do that... (Score:4, Insightful)
A version 0.1 is not something you trust valuable data with. Never. If you really want to test it, backup you email and put it safely away, preferably in another non-connected physical machine where the new software can't have a chance to find it. Read again the version number: 0.1. Even running smothly this is the sort of version that eats your real mail, misfilters all the spam and trash your disk on the side.
Re:Then don't do that... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Will it import my Mozilla Mail and settings? (Score:5, Informative)
On other imports, I successfully imported 500mb of Outlook data with no problem. Easy to share the data between t-bird and mozmail too.
As to the
Re:Will it import my Mozilla Mail and settings? (Score:3, Informative)
can we have a resounding "Hell yeah?"
To test out Thunderbird, I moved my mail foders to a FAT32 data drive a few days ago, and told Thunderbird and Mozilla to both look at the same place. The auto-filters I use were just a bit off, but the folders themselves were all there.
You don't need to hack anything--it's a preference in
Satanic as I may be for saying this... (Score:2, Interesting)
My first real e-mail client was a little doodad written in HyperCard, and on my own machine, was Netscape 2.0 on an old Duo 270c. I used Netscape 3.0 when I had to, and then started using Outlook Express when Netscape 4.0 Standalone was introduced.
Since I moved to Outlook Express, I have tried many e-mail clients including newer versions of Netscape, Mozilla, and even Apple's Mail.app, but the utility of OE/Entourage has yet to be beat in my eyes. It is a pret
MS Entourage is pretty nice (Score:3, Informative)
Microsoft has recently dropped the price for standalone Entourage to $99, and I think they have an Entourage/Word bundle for $190. (It's still probably a better deal to make use of the Office OEM bundle when buying a new Mac from a reseller).
http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/entouragex/ e ntourag [microsoft.com]
Choices People, Choices! (Score:2, Insightful)
The Moz guys see splitting up as an unquestionable Good Thing, but they don't seem to realize that some people like Mozilla as it is.
The difference? (Score:2)
Re:Choices People, Choices! (Score:2, Funny)
Jebus.
Good but still needs work (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Good but still needs work (Score:5, Interesting)
You get to the point where you want to worry about making smarter users rather than smarter software. It should be beyond most people.
Re:Good but still needs work (Score:5, Interesting)
If every one of my personal contacts had PGP/GPG easily available on their clients, spam would no longer be an issue to me, because I could just refuse unsigned mail, and then mail not on my allowed-keys list.
An Introduction to Thunderbird (Score:5, Informative)
CB
"Also of note, from 1.2% in February to 1.6% now"? (Score:2)
Re:"Also of note, from 1.2% in February to 1.6% no (Score:5, Funny)
Also in the news (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think it's an official milestone, perhaps more of a release candidate, but test it out for the team anyway!
And in big red letters on a yellow box it says: (Score:3)
D'oh.
Re:And in big red letters on a yellow box it says: (Score:2)
Re:Also in the news (Score:5, Informative)
Mozilla Firebird 0.6.1 is available (download [mozilla.org]). Asa Dotzler explained [mozillazine.org] the reason for this intermediate release: "Firebird 0.6 had two major flaws that have been fixed for a while now - the autocomplete crasher and the DOM security bug that broke most cool bookmarklets [squarefree.com] (and probably websites too). We _need_ to get these fixes into the hands of 0.6 users as soon as possible." Firebird 0.6.1 is based on the Mozilla 1.5 alpha branch, giving us time to avoid having major regressions in 0.6.1. If you're still using Internet Explorer, now is a great time to switch [mozilla.org].
SGI IRIX builds? (Score:3, Informative)
BTW, I see that SGI has posted an IRIX version of Mozilla 1.4 in both tarball and inst/swmgr native tardist installable format:
ftp://oss.sgi.com/projects/mozilla/downl
Re:SGI IRIX builds? (Score:2, Informative)
BTW, to the person who modded the parent comment down, you're a dumbass. That wasn't offtopic.
Thunderbird and Firebird (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm also writing this on Mozilla Firebird which is a sleek and fast browser for Windows and Linux. I really don't use IE anymore except to access some corporate reporting type websites at work and to access all those lame webpages on the web that are designed for IE lusers instead of the entire web.
As soon as the Mozilla team builds a better OS/UI for Linux or Windows, I'll be switching my gaming computer over completely!
Re:Thunderbird and Firebird (Score:3, Interesting)
As a result, Mozilla cannot be used by newbies that need bidi, only by experts (such as myself!), but even some of them (for example Me!) have switched back to one of the MS clients since they have flawless bidi support.
Real editor support? (Score:4, Interesting)
I poked around with it on Mac OS X.... (Score:4, Interesting)
The one thing I don't like about it and Mozilla Mail is that you get one "From" address for each account. In Mail.app, I separate mail addresses with commas, and I get a drop-down to choose from.
If anyone knows how to do this in Mozilla and/or Thunderbird, please let me know. I like Mail.app, but Mozilla Mail seemed faster, and Thunderbird seemed even better.
dochood
in other news... (Score:2)
Re:in other news... (Score:5, Funny)
No one is fooling anyone (Score:2, Insightful)
"lies, damn lies, and statistics."
That adage is totally irrelevant here, because no data is being hidden, and there is no handwaving to distract from the real numbers: they are given up front. No one is claiming they are poised to take over the market over the next year, or anything stupid like that. It's just a little pat on the back, that says "hey, word is spreading that our product is in fact getting better, and more people like it". Kudos to them.
Save your adages and sarcasm for statments like "
Excellent! (Score:3, Informative)
Best IMAP support on windows bar none (Score:5, Informative)
-no "phantom" messages like OE (my previous favourite) gets
-ssl support
-automagic configuration of namespaces (something most imap clients don't do even though it's in the RFC)
-conditional subfolder checking for "new" in case you have server side filtering
-"delete", "mark deleted", and "move to trash" support, instead of the simple "mark deleted" most imap clients have
-50% more pie
Re:Best IMAP support on windows bar none (Score:5, Informative)
Howawah, IMAP still has a problem I find galling. The whole point is that you can check it from anywhere using all kinds of clients, right? The problem is with those (unspec-ed?) areas that each client finds fit to implement differently. So where Mozilla makes me a Trash folder, Mail.app makes Deleted Messages, SquirrelMail makes an INBOX.Trash, etc., ad nauseam. All on first connection before you even get a chance to configure them. And so the family complains about "all that junk in my profile".
(BTW I could swear I once saw a pref to change that Trash name in either Mozilla or Mail.app, which I can't find anymore. Anyone remember if/where that exists?)
Re:Best IMAP support on windows bar none (Score:5, Informative)
After you set that then Mail.app will shoot all of your trash for that account over to that remote folder.
Re:Roaming Profiles, gone but not forgotten. (Score:3, Interesting)
This allowed you to store bookmarks, preferences, addresss books etc. in an LDAP server or (less often) a web server. You could then log in and retrieve them from anywhere.
LDAP support in Communicator 4 was generally excellent, and has generally disappeared from Mozilla apart from address lookup. I have some LDAP experience, if anyone is intereste
Been using Tbird since April or May (Score:5, Interesting)
Only ONE complaint about Tbird, aside from some minor cosmetic work--at this point in time it requires a third party app to check any sort of webmail--yahoo, netscape, Hotmail/MSN, etc. This IMHO is a BIG setback, as programs like hotmailpopper et. al. don't cut the mustard (seemingly incapable even of marking messages read once TB gets them, deleting msg's as they're deleted from TB's inbox, etc)
Make Thunderbird work with hotmail and it will look alot more appealing to alot of people
Re:Been using Tbird since April or May (Score:3, Insightful)
IMO, email clients have no business parsing web pages, even webmail sites. Email clients rely on stable, published standards in order to operate reliably. Websi
33% usage increase: Mozilla just turned some heads (Score:5, Insightful)
My guess is that people are using Mozilla to get a handle on pop-ups.
Re:33% usage increase: Mozilla just turned some he (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:33% usage increase: wrong mathematics (Score:3, Insightful)
Saying that there's a 33% increase from 1.2% to 1.6% is not sound. Maybe the numbers 1.2% and 1.6% are the results of rounding 1.2499% and 1.5500%, respectively. Whoops, now it's only a 24% increase.
A more correct statement would have been that the increase is between 24% and 43% - that's really everything which can be derived from the given numbers. Remember, numbers without error/uncertainty estimates are almost always useless.
Pretty solid already (Score:5, Informative)
By the way, something useful for non-US English users that took me a while to figure out: Thunderbird uses MySpell dictionaries which can be downloaded here [openoffice.org].
And lots more tips for Thunderbird here [texturizer.net].
Does it have "safe preview"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is this important? Because spammers make special URLs that encode your email address, and their servers use the special URLs to track you. If you even preview the message in Outlook, or in Mozilla Mail, their server gets a hit and they know your email address is a good one.
There is a command on a menu, "Load Images", that will go ahead and put hits on servers and render the message completely. You can use this for email from sources you trust. (It ought to be a toolbar button, but it isn't yet in Evolution.)
If Thunderbird doesn't already have this, I ought to file a bug.
steveha
Yes it does. (Score:5, Informative)
In other words YES, it does. As long as the message is marked as JUNK MAIL, it will stripp it of anything that could be dangerous for viewing, if it is not dangerous, just mark as "not junk"
Not enough. (Score:5, Interesting)
And for the more normal non-geek user, it should really help them more with this.
I'm well aware of the odds (slim) that any non-geek uses Phoenix or Mozilla Mail for that matter at this point, but no harm in looking forward is there?
I think it should sanitize *all* mails not explicitly marked as safe - just make a little blurb (like the "Mozilla thinks this mail is junk" notification) that "This message tries to talk to a server. Do you want to allow that?" with a link to an explanation in the help files or something like that.
One thing that really could go a long way would simply to disallow all automatic loading of any url containing parameters. Of course, that could be bypassed by using parameters in the PATH instead, but it would probably weed out lots of these cases. What legitimate email would need to send parameters in an image url?
Opera's M2 Does It Too (Score:3, Informative)
Check out Outlook 2003 (Score:2, Interesting)
1. Three vertical panes. 1 thin pane for folders. 1 pane for folder contents and 1 pane for displaying the selected mail. It is a MUCH more efficient use of space.
2. Follow up flags. Flag an email and file it away to reduce your inbox clutter. You can keep track of flagged mails in the "Flagged mail" folder (durr!). Use different coloured
Re:Check out Outlook 2003 (Score:3, Informative)
Thunderbird already has it. Even mentioned in the summary. I don't like it myself, but whatever...
Re:Check out Outlook 2003 (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not really flaming you, it's just a despairing situation. I use mutt, and I find it very difficult to use anything else. mutt is text only, but of course it can launch external viewers for graphics. It's super fast, and keyboard controlled. If you're handling large amounts of mail you can't use Outlook, because you're too reliant on the mouse. The rules are fine in Outlook but they're just not configurable enough to power sort email. Flagging has been available since Outlook Express 4, and you could easily sort by flag, shift-click to select, and move the messages. Now, this can be done automatically with some "flagged mail" folder. How is this killer?
I could do T (tag pattern) then write a regexp based on from, to, subject, body, etc, then have all matching messages tagged in a flash. Or I can tag some messages manually. Then ; to action the tagged messages, and in a flash copy them to another folder, forward them all to someone, reply to them all as one neatly formatted message, and so on. This is power email, and it's not in a GUI, and it doesn't take up massive resources. It is compatible with several mailbox formats, IMAP and POP. It can even write to several mailbox formats, it doesn't have an import/export hell.
Most corporate email I see is a complete mess thanks to Outlook. Notwithstanding all those stupid disclaimer signatures that aren't even line-wrapped properly and all that. OH, and don't even get me started on MS-TNEF and winmail.dat attachments which I still get from the occasional new client. Why should I run Outlook in order to receive mail from them, or why should I have to call them to change their settings, when MIME encapsulation, uuencode and base64 have been perfectly adequate for years before that client gained ground?
Outlook has a lot to do with this chaos, because it's such a prevailing piece of software... but I wouldn't call it a prevailing standard. The standard was set by PC-Pine (at least in my experience) on Unix/Linux around about the time of (maybe before) Win 3.11. Outlook is STILL playing catchup, some 10 years later. That's just plain crazy.
an immature aspect (Score:2)
Lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:5, Insightful)
In the same period Netscape has lost more users than Mozilla has gained.
It states IE6 adoption is increasing (my gran could've told you that) but fails to state the movement of MS's overall market share.
Assessing reported browser, but calling it usage (Score:3, Insightful)
7. Opera 6.0 0.6%
Methodology: A global usage share of xx percent for browser Y means that xx percent of the visitors of Internet users arrived at sites that are using one of OneStat.com's services by using browser Y.
Just as an example of why these types of numbers need to be taken with more than a single grain of salt. In the example above, Opera 7.0 (and I think 6.0) defaults to reporting itself as MSIE. So unless the user cracks open the prefs and digs deep into one of the many preferences panes and flicks a switch, those visits will be taken away from the Opera totals and heaped onto the MSIE totals.
They are most likely assessing the reported user agent string to their network of websites which may or may not be the actual browser being used.
Re:Assessing reported browser, but calling it usag (Score:3, Insightful)
This is how MSN identified Opera users to serve them a different style sheet. This is how my bank prevents me from using their online banking application.
Mozilla, OmniWeb, and many other alternative browsers let you override the user agent string to whatever you want. Opera does not allow you this flexibility. I know this because I'm a registered Opera
I'd rather use the suite, thanks. (Score:2, Interesting)
That being the inability to right-click on a web page and have the "send page" menu option.
I have a low-end system, but I'll make a point of finding resources to get this kind of functionality.
Splitting the two programs up seems like a step backwards, in my opinion.
Re:I'd rather use the suite, thanks. (Score:5, Interesting)
As for the resource issue, again, just wait a bit. Once the GRE is implemented and in common use, all these components will be able to share the same runtime. As a result, the various mozilla libraries will only get loaded into memory once and then shared by all the components just like any other shared libary.
So, no, splitting up the programs was definitely *not* a step backwards. The issues you list will be dealt with, and the result will be a far more flexible, customizable, and maintainable system. At least, IMHO.
only 1.6%??? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm trying to get my friends to switch to Mozilla but it's very difficult to convince people to try a different web browser.
Re:only 1.6%??? (Score:3)
You may want to forward them over to Mozilla's own "why you should switch" [mozilla.org] page. it's pretty well done, but more important, finally shows that Mozilla is willing to do some marketing of their superior product!
MozWinManager? (Score:2, Interesting)
I know OEone (or whatver its called) exists but its mainly for redhat right? And it seems as if its mainly for the beginer. Its application focus with kidna doesnt sit well with me.
I think once a Moz Desktop is developed we'll be set. Wont have to bugger round with other GUI's and mozilla apps will load a lot faster
When thunderbird and firebird are
Opera's M2 (Score:2, Offtopic)
The built-in spamfilter rocks, too, and
Re:Opera's M2 (Score:3, Interesting)
'jfb
Re:Opera's M2 (Score:5, Interesting)
Threaded replies
Highly functional spam filtering
Automagic contact-gathering
Automatically-created "views" for each contact? Just click "Sender," and things sort based on who sent it. Else, just enter some text into the "Subject or Sender contains" bar for some fast, arbitrary filtering. More complicated "views"? Use the "View" dropdown.
Why would in the world would I want to pay money for this stuff?
So... (Score:3, Insightful)
Netscape Mail is a huge pain in the ass to support (Score:5, Insightful)
She'd been using the internet since the Old Days, back when Netscape was being used by the masses. The problem is that the mail client for Netscape 7 likes to use the sidebar buttons entirely too much.
How too much? Twice, to be exact. Only twice, you ask?
Well, twice is way too many. Because once you hide your mailbox list on the left side, and the message index pane at the top, all you see is the one message you had selected.
Or, when you start the application, you see the web page that you put in as the start page for mail (god knows why you'd want one). So all our Little Old Lady from Silicon Valley could see was our home page. Which happened to also have a link to our webmail. Imagine her confusion when she found that she had no mail when she logged on that way. Not to mention the confusion of the level 1 techs below me, who couldn't quite decipher what the hell was going on.
This is where the story gets interesting, and more importantly, points out some very important interface design flaws in Netscape and Mozilla.
Those buttons to hide and unhide the left and top panes are strictly for the sort that reads Slashdot. Their purpose is not obvious. Their very existence is not obvious. And if one were to click them accidentally, it's not obvious what happened. More importantly though, is that they are fucking impossible to describe over the phone. They don't look like buttons. Hell, the border that they reside on isn't something you can describe either, especially when the border that exists around the web page being displayed is much more obvious. Personally, I'm certain that there is no real reason to use them in an e-mail program, because quite honestly, the folders list should always be visible, and the index list should likewise always be visible. If they should ever disappear, the user will invariably wonder where they went and complain to someone like me. Outlook Express at least, has menu choices to bring them back. Netscape does not.
Netscape will never again be ready for primetime. There are two reasons for this: IE and Outlook Express comes with every computer on the planet, (or near enough to make no odds) and Netscape's/Mozilla's interface was designed by geeks, for geeks. While this makes it superior because of better features, it makes it very hard to do technical support for it over the phone. As such, people like me will continue to recommend it to customers, and will continue to get people started with it in the first place. It simply makes our jobs easier.
Re:Netscape Mail is a huge pain in the ass to supp (Score:3, Interesting)
Funny... I have switched EVERYONE at my office... both on their desks and at home to mozilla for one tiny little feature....
Popup blocking.
and it's spreading like wildfire... at least 10 users have came back to me for another CD copy of the installer as they
Re:Netscape Mail is a huge pain in the ass to supp (Score:5, Insightful)
And maybe in between your ranting you would've realized that Thunderbird is NOT Mozilla Mail 1.4. This program is geared for the masses, much like Firebird is supposed to be the common man's Mozilla. Maybe you would've even realized that Thunderbird fixes the very problem you're bitching about. No "my sidebar", no grippy to accidentally close the folder list with.
There ARE tangible benefits to moving over to Thunderbird, spam filtering among them. Intangible benefits include not being reliant on Microsoft for everything.
spellING checker! (Score:3, Informative)
"Offline" Syncronization (Score:3, Interesting)
I've been using thunderbird for about two months now, and I have one feature that I sorely miss from OE. In OE, I had the machine "syncronize" each folder, so it didn't have to hit the server for each message. How can I make T-bird do the same?
Mozilla Usage (Score:3, Insightful)
------------
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stability? (Score:3, Informative)
Thunderbird is only 0.1 in terms of being a Stand-Alone App (with a load of new features).
IE Too tough? Bullshit. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:IE Too tough? Bullshit. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:IE Too tough? Bullshit. (Score:2)
Re:0.1? (Score:5, Funny)
The Mozilla developers realized that the slow and gradual climb toward Mozilla 1.0 was the most magical and exciting time of their lives. Every time they released a new 0.x version, they created a buzz of excitement as people speculated about how much longer it would take to get to 1.0, and even more people complained about how long it was taking them to develop Mozilla, how bloated and slow it was, and so on.
And then Mozilla 1.0 was released and the Open Source world rejoiced. No doubt this must have been an exciting time for the Mozilla developers.
Imagine the let-down after such a climax.
1.1? Who cares. 1.2? Yeah yeah, blah whatever. Yeah we all know it's good now, yeah we're all using it (or other browsers which use its rendering engine), except for those whacko Konqueror lovers. It's not news anymore, it's just the next version to upgrade to.
Needless to say, the Mozilla developers must have sunk into a deep depression. Finally, at a meeting of the devs, one of them must have come up with a bright idea....
Dev 1: "Hey, I know how we can recapture the magic of those pre-1.0 days!"
Dev 2: "Really?? How? Something has to be done, because I've been drinking non-stop and my wife's about to leave me!"
Dev 1: "We can dump 'Mozilla'--it's just too boring now that we're past 1.0--and instead split it into separate mail and browser components. And we might as well dump the Composer, no one uses that anyway."
Dev 2: "But why? We've been ignoring the 'Mozilla is too bloated' crowd for years, why bother to change now?"
Dev 1: "Don't you see? Even though we're using the post-1.0 code we already have, we can consider the separate browser and mail components to be _new programs_...."
Dev 2: "You mean... we can start them at version 0.1!"
Dev 1: "Exactly! And we can recapture the magic of working toward 1.0 with not one program, but two!"
Dev 2: "Genius! Fscking genius!"
Well... that's my theory anyway.
stability (Score:2)
Re:Have they included ActiveX support yet? (Score:2, Insightful)