Must-Have Extensions for Thunderbird 2.0 262
Operator writes "While Firefox has been in the spotlight for some time now, Thunderbird has yet to enjoy the same wide adoption or glowing praise despite being an excellent email client. It's no surprise that a popular topic has been Firefox's best (and worst) extensions while Thunderbird add-ons have gone largely unnoticed. In celebration of the recent release of Thunderbird 2.0 here are the best extensions for the program along with some honorable mentions."
enigmail extension (Score:5, Informative)
Enigmail adds OpenPGP message encryption and authentication to your email client. It features automatic encryption, decryption and integrated key management functionality. Enigmail requires GnuPG (www.gnupg.org) for the cryptographic functions. Note: GnuPG is not part of the installation.
A True Must Have (Score:3, Insightful)
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Most email users have never had anyone try and fake messages from them to other people. I can see the advantages, but non-nerds aren't going to jump through hoops to add the required encryption subsystem to their email systems when it offers no advantage. I can see encryption itself being marginally more popular, but not much so.
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With the "obvious" exceptions of spam and viruses spread by email.
Re:A True Must Have (Score:4, Informative)
Re:A True Must Have (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh course, considering the number of people who have shifted to webmail, its going to be interesting to see if any of these big webmail providers begin to support crytopgrahy. Are people going to trust google, yahoo, or hotmail with their private key? Do they even know what this means?
Sadly, the encrypt email revolution never happened (poor phil zimmerman) and thanks to webmail and an apathetic public it probably never will.
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need Enigmail, but also user-friendly Key Servers (Score:2)
For example, the other day I was composing an email message, and thought, "I should encrypt this." But I didn't have the recipient's public key. (I think the recipient was a software developer of a program I had just downloaded.)
Re:need Enigmail, but also user-friendly Key Serve (Score:2)
Lightning (Score:4, Insightful)
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It is better than nothing, but it is not a proper calendar either. BTW, is there any way to get rid of it temporarily if I don't want to use it? It takes up so much space that could have better use sometimes.
Anyway, if you need a real calendar, you have to go for a more powerful solution, such as Gmail, KMail, Evolution or Outlook. Note that the later two programs suck quite a lot.
Re:Lightning (Score:4, Informative)
It is better than nothing, but it is not a proper calendar either. BTW, is there any way to get rid of it temporarily if I don't want to use it? It takes up so much space that could have better use sometimes.
Anyway, if you need a real calendar, you have to go for a more powerful solution, such as Gmail, KMail, Evolution or Outlook. Note that the later two programs suck quite a lot.
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I use reminder fox right now because it supports FTP upload. I then view the calendar online with phpCalendar parsing the iCal file.
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Having said tha
dispMUA - Display Mail User Agent (Score:5, Informative)
Home Page: http://cweiske.de/misc_extensions.htm [cweiske.de]
Extension Link: http://www.cweiske.de/files/download/misc/dispmua
List of Supported Agents: http://cweiske.de/misc_extensions_dispmuas.htm [cweiske.de]
The list (Score:4, Informative)
Runners-up: Dictionary Switcher, View Headers Toggle Button, Contacts Sidebar.
It also mentions "Mozilla has three recommended extensions, Foxytunes, Enigmail, and an adblocker"
Wait for Penelope ! (Score:3, Interesting)
Just wait for Penelope, a better Thunderbird than Thunderbird !
Re:Wait for Penelope ! (Score:4, Insightful)
Now get off my lawn.
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Oh, and even if you aren't actually replying to a quote (because, for example, you use GMail and it already reads like a book), please for the love of God strip out all the cruft like signatures ads (I'm in a lot of Yahoo! Groups, which tack ads onto everything... come to think of it, so does plain old Yahoo! Mail), because the rest of us probably didn't want to read it the first time, let alone have it waste our visual real estate when we're trying to read a complet
Re:Wait for Penelope ! (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to feel this way too, being one of the more pedantic, elitist, hardcore, old school netiquette snobs around. However after having lived in the real world for a while, I find the practice of full bottom posting to be far more annoying than full top posting (where "full" means the entire quoted text is preserved).
On a mailing list or active thread among many people, it quickly becomes tiresome to constantly scroll down to the start of the reply for every new email that comes in. My old school snobbery still insists that the proper method is to prune your quoted reply text to the relevant context and reply inline. But for those who are too lazy to do this (nearly everyone except us throwbacks) and as a result end up quoting the entire email, I find in this case top posting to be far more practical and sensible than bottom posting.
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I used to feel this way too, being one of the more pedantic, elitist, hardcore, old school netiquette snobs around. However after having lived in the real world for a while, I find the practice of full bottom posting to be far more annoying than full top posting (where "full" means the entire quoted text is preserved).
The GP wasn't talking about full bottom posting. He was referring to what I call "contextual inline quoting", which is the practice of deleting all of the quoted text, except for enough to give contextual reference, and then quoting inline.
I have no big beef with either top or bottom posting, provided that the author can be bothered to trim his fucking quotes. Since we live in a world where the vast majority of people can't be bothered to actually do so, the practice of fully-quoted top posting has becom
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That works well for Usenet, where presumably everyone has access to the message history. In email, I've often had an multiple-round email thread forwarded to me asking if I can comment or if I can do something mentioned. Without the history of the email discussion present, it would make no sense.
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there is so much more features in Outlook
Unless I'm mistaken, Thunderbird replaces Outlook Express, not Outlook.
There are huge differences between those two.
I agree that I'd like Thunderbird to handle more of Outlook's work, but there are extensions (like Lightening) that are slowly doing that.
the answer was at the bottom
At least put some effort in!
Account Settings > [account] > Composition & Addressing > Select: start my reply above the quote
Personally, I use Thunderbird because I find it very quick and easy to use.
I do get the occasional inbox/email corrupti
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What's wrong with your "End" key?
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Regarding top posting vs. bottom posting: this is hardly a "Mac style" issue & many different clients each have there own style. It is configurable in thunderbird & you can set it top post if you really want that. (Conventions v
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Actually the reason has more to do with most languages reading from the top of the page to the bottom. Hence you have "footnotes" rather than "headnotes".
Giving an "answers" before a "questions" or a comment prior to whatever is being commented upon simply does not make sense. Things make most sense if they are directly after whatever they refer to. Whilst postfixing everything to the end of the message might be necessary with a paper letter
Quote collapse (Score:5, Funny)
Sloooooooo.....oooow (Score:2, Interesting)
Order by send date. (Score:2)
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That is the impression I get, too. I was a regular user of Mozilla Mail, but since they cut up the suite, there is really no reason to use Thunderbird anymore.
Order by is configurable (Score:5, Informative)
You can sort messages by the contents of any column by clicking on the column header. Click again to sort in the opposite order. So once you have an Order Received column, click on its heading to have messages sorted by the received date instead of the Send Date. The sort order you select is remembered when you exit and restart Thunderbird.
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Moreover, while it doesn't have a "recieved date", it does have an "order received" field, which means you can sort by that with the same results as sorting by recieved date.
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wake up editors. (Score:5, Insightful)
Its of abysmal quality and precious little substance.
2 in a row? (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot : news for nerds, payed fpr by Mozilla and Google.
Because it sucks? (Score:3, Interesting)
Thunderbird on the other hand is just a lot of promises. It still uses folders, while labels are obviously the way to go. Threading is poor. Integration between different message sources is basically non-existent. The search function sucks really badly. There is no integration with any reasonable calender (and don't call sunbird reasonable). And it is actually difficult to use, certainly compared to the competition (Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Outlook, Opera, KMail...).
I mean seriously: can Thunderbird even sort threads on the date of the most recent message in a thread? Last time I tried it could not. GMail does that by default, and it is by far the most sensible way to order messages. Make Thunderbird not suck, and I will give it another try.
TB thread sorting (was Re:Because it sucks?) (Score:4, Informative)
Options usually work if you just try them.
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What the user wants, in TB parlance, is "Order Recieved", he just couldn't figure it out and so complained that TB couldn't do it.
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Interesting, that actually works. It used to sort threads by the date of the head of the thread only, and now that has been changed to the last message in a thread. I am impressed.
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Thunderbird 2.0 has tags, which if I understand correctly is the same as labels, except you get to (or "have to") use folders in addition to tags. It doesn't appear to store the tags on the IMAP server, though, which is bummer and makes it useless for me (haven't tried it myself, but read some forum posting that said it didn't). IMAP is of course still folder based, so eliminating folde
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Even before 2.0, thunderbird supported virtual search folders. This seems to be as good as labels in most cases--most gmail users I've observed have filters to auto-apply labels to their messages & few manually tag posts.
Re:Because it sucks? (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes you can sort however you like. It really isn't a problem.
And so far the search works well for me.
Kmail and Evolution only run on Linux and I have to use Windows.
Outlook has caused me more grief with blown PSTs and other issues than I can shake a stick at and it only runs on Windows and I have to use Linux.
Gmail and Yahoo mail? They are not bad but I need to access my office email server.
Thunderbird while not perfect.. Get a good calander interface going guys. Is a good email client. It just isn't a good calender client.
I have yet to see as complete of a solution as Outlook+Exchange yet. I am just not willing to pay the price to use Exchange.
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I understand that Outlook merged the two and a lot of people who used to use (or currently use) Outlook got used to it. But I really don't see how calendar / scheduling and e-mail is related and why Thunderbird (or any e-mail client) should feel pressed to integrate a calendar application.
Wouldn't you be better served using a stand-alone calendar / scheduler and stand-alone
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The long reason is that your contact list in pretty much at the center of email, your calender, and your todo lists.
An email client and a Personal information manager are very closely related now.
Lets say you going to schedule a meeting. You then check your calender and put it
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The thing about tags is that you can have multiple tags for a given message. Very useful if the boss write about different topics in the same email, and you usually sort by topics. You could fake the same functionality by copying the same message to the different folders, but it's somewhat a waste of space, and if you delete the message, it won't all be deleted.
I faking tags in kontact these day by dumpi
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I too use TB. But honestly the only reason I do is because I have a certain sense of loyalty to Mozilla, and I want to believe that TB will be the app for mail.
However, I'm not sure how deluded that idea is. I converted to Firefox because it just was so intuitive as to the way I needed to browse. The extensions helped that even more. It was a night and day epiphany in browsing for me. It offered me more (much more) that I was
A ways to go... (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyone know of an extension (Score:3, Interesting)
gmail (Score:2)
Virtual Identity (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, to have a mobile client that would sync. (Score:2)
However, I wish there were a WM(5/6) client that would sync through activesync. Call WM any names you want (I've used most of the profane ones at some point in the past 5 years) - but it's on practically all poratble devices that aren't named after a small fruit or body part (hmm, well it does have significant marketshare, even if I coulnd't say "most").
I'm tempted every now and then to want to switch to outlook for the simple reason that it Ju
Obligatory end-to-end commentary (Score:5, Informative)
Thunderbird+Lightning connected to a Citadel server [citadel.org] does the job quite nicely. Mail, calendar, contacts, all server-side and end-to-end, 100 percent open source.
Thanks for asking.
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All I want to do is natively store my Calendar and Contact information in an IMAP folder. I don't want to replicate it to the client. I don't want to have to manage merge conflicts. I just want it running directly out of IMAP. Nothin
My favorites (Score:2)
Show InOut: adds a column to the thread pane which shows whether you or someone else wrote the message. This is useful if you want both incoming and outgoing messages in the same folder
Mnenhy: Among other things, allows you to have different columns shown in the thread pane, depending upon which folder you're viewing.
GMailUI: Among other things, improved searching of your folders.
TagZilla (Score:5, Interesting)
I have people ask me all the time how I get those randomly selected tags on my emails. Of course the answer starts with "First off, you have to be using Thunderbird..."
Find/Remove Duplicate Messages! (Score:2)
Group by 'From' (Score:2)
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External Editor (Score:3, Informative)
No one mentioned the External Editor [globs.org] extension yet? Nice to be able to kick off your favorite editor without cut-n-pasting. Something every mail client should have, but maybe I'm just old fashioned.
Forget the extensions, improve the app! (Score:4, Interesting)
I have always had a soft spot for the children of Netscape, but Thunderbird hasn't seen a serious reworking since it was split off from the original program. Let me know when the developers release a serious update, and I'll take another look. Until then, I will continue to use the PortableApp version of Thunderbird to check my email at work; it's not that it doesn't work, it's just that it lacks elegance.
ROT-13 (Score:2)
Purge Button (Score:2)
Rotating .sig (Score:2)
Re:inefficiency of splitting mozilla (Score:5, Informative)
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Why not have each application plug into a single, standalone installation of XULRunner, or some such? Redundant libraries only get loaded once that way. It saves resources and boosts performance.
Firefox on its own already uses entirely too much memory. Throw in T-Bird, make it load much of the same libraries attributing to Firefox alre
Re:inefficiency of splitting mozilla (Score:4, Insightful)
In other words: Theory? Meet Real World Practice. Practice? Say Hi to Ivory-Tower Theory.
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Presumably because someone wanted the Windows version to be installable as a non privileged user, thus not requiring write access to C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32. But Windows isn't smart enough to spot when a DLL is already resident...
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Mod parent up! (Score:2)
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I use it at home on my linux box, and it runs just fine as a portable app (sylpheed --configdir=foo) from the USB stick when forced to use somebody else's computer on the road (IMAP over SSL along with SMTP Auth and SMTP with Starttls to my home server).
A very nice lightweight mail client, with some good improvements to the UI in the 2.4 version that was recently released.
If you enjoy having more crap built-in (like rendering HTML), check out claws, wh
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still needs better. (Score:2)
(either that or I don't know what I'm doing with 2.0)
It still kills me that it can import from outlook / mozilla suite, but it can't do something simple like import from an older version or a flat mbox file.
Steven V>
Re:KMail (Score:4, Informative)
It allows you to backup and restore bookmarks, mail, contacts, history, extensions, cache etc.
Been using it for ages, it's one of the handiest tools I've got.
Cheers!
Re:KMail (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:top posting (Score:5, Funny)
I agree... unfortunately, everyone at work does it. So if I start at the bottom, and the email goes back and forth several times, you simply can't follow it anymore. It must have been outlook that started that nonsense.
Re:top posting (Score:5, Funny)
Yup, you definitely hate top posting.
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Of course my colleagues and clients top post also
In fact you don't have to scroll up and down to get the sense of what is being said otherwise
This means that judiciously snipped mail threads are legible in a single mail
Thunderbird post-posts by default
Re:top posting (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's better to remove all quotes
which is a freaking pain in the ass.
message backwards
then I have read your
If you top-post,
we read top to bottom.
Because in English
Re:top posting (Score:4, Funny)
On 2007.04.25 9:35 Stavr0 wrote:
> Why is top posting bad?
>
> On 2007.04.25 8:40, KV9 wrote:
> > top posting is bad mkay?
>
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Some of us don't want to have to reread or needlessly scroll through the entirety of multiple emails to get to the most recent response(s). Especially in longer conversations involving several people. If you've forgotten what the email was about, then you can do your scrolling. Otherwise, the part you need (the most recent bit) is right there in front of you. Efficiency!
But I guess that depends on i
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And you shouldn't have to. It is the responsibility of the sender to edit the thread down to just the parts that he is replying to so that he can respond to them in-line. In this fashion, they can respond to each point just like a real conversation. Top-posting pretty much limits you to replying to a single point in the entire email you're responding to which ruins email
Whats wrong? (Score:2)
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filters; virtual search folders (Score:2)
It also has virtual search folders, which make it easy to find a message based on criteria (including header content)