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Software

Thunderbird v60.0 Email Client Released (thunderbird.net) 100

Thunderbird version 60, featuring a number of new features and changes, is now available as a direct download from thunderbird.net, the email client vendor said. The changelog: When writing a message, a delete button now allows the removal of a recipient. This delete button is displayed when hovering the To/Cc/Bcc selector.
Many improvements to attachments handling during compose: Attachments can now be reordered using a dialog, keyboard shortcuts, or drag and drop. The "Attach" button moved to the right to be above the attachment pane. The access key of the attachment pane (e.g. Alt+M, may vary depending on localization, Ctrl+M on Mac) now also works to show or hide the pane. The attachment pane can also be shown initially when composing a new message. Right-click on the header to enable this option. Hiding a non-empty attachment pane will now show a placeholder paperclip to indicate the presence of attachments and avoid sending them accidentally.
"Edit Template" command. This also solves various problems when saving as template (duplicates created, message ID lost).
"New Message from Template" command.
Allow changing the Spellcheck Language from status bar.
Light and Dark themes.
WebExtension themes are now enabled in Thunderbird.
A default startup directory in the address book window can now be configured.
Individual feed update interval.
Read the full-change log here.
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Thunderbird v60.0 Email Client Released

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    My e-mail is currently Outlook and it uses Exchange. If I want to replace Outlook I need whatever I use to also be able to connect to Exchange.
    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:22AM (#57079000)

      That is what is called in the industry as vendor lock in.
      They sell you a wonderfully integrated system, which is all fine and good until you want to De-integrate with the system. Then you need to make the choice, loose features, or replace entire system.

      A system that uses Open Standards may have all the features, but will require some additional setup work. As Emails, Calendars, Contacts, Single Signon authentication are all different protocols, and can be managed across may different servers vs an exchange server which does it all... Except when something new comes out.

    • by jawtheshark ( 198669 ) * <slashdot.jawtheshark@com> on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:34AM (#57079124) Homepage Journal
      Look into DAVMail [sourceforge.net].
      • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

        by Darkk ( 1296127 )

        "DavMail gateway is implemented in java and should run on any platform"

        And why would I be stuck with this java stuffs when it's being phased out and eliminate the security concerns? If they are planning a complete rewrite to use open standards I'd be up for it.

    • What you're looking for is DavMail [sourceforge.net]. I've been using it for years so that I can have all my email accounts in one program.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Couple options. If available, you can connect to the imap interface for mail. If the exchange server is based on activesync, you can use either tbsync or exquilla. If based on EWS, look into DavMail or https://github.com/ExchangeCal... [github.com] (though I'm not sure about it's v60.0 support).
    • My e-mail is currently Outlook and it uses Exchange. If I want to replace Outlook I need whatever I use to also be able to connect to Exchange.

      I used to use Thunderbird, but no longer do. Basically I got with my current employer because they (Fortune 500 company) bought out my previous employer. For a few years they left us alone and we managed our own email and I used Thunderbird. Still miss Thunderbird. It was awesome. Outlook is not awesome. It's better than Lotus Notes, but what isn't? Here's a problem you may have. In theory I could make Thunderbird connect to our Exchange server, but the problem is that to set it up, it requires som

      • Hi

        Not quite sure what you have against Lotus Notes? Last time i really used was around 2007 with IIRC 8.5 version. I've used in in corporate environment with Sametime integration, custom apps and so on. And back then I've found it much better then I currently find Microsoft Outlook 2016 (with Skype). Really Outlook 2016 is very clunky and sucks so much (and it is the best Outlook out there).

        Examples:
        - try managing a large (lets say 20+) rule set sane with Outlook - impossible, I remember with Notes it was m

        • by ralzod ( 537241 )

          Not quite sure what you have against Lotus Notes? Last time i really used was around 2007...

          Not much has changed since then, including the c2007 bugs. Sametime is much better than Skype for Business, though.

    • by Pitawg ( 85077 )

      Currently using Thunderbird 52.91 (icedove) on debian to connect to Exchange with ExQuilla add-on for Exchange I believe using the web service port functionality. With Lightning, and LookOut+ add-ons helping translate some of the in-message items, I have functional email for work, and Exchange to Thunderbird Calendar population from invites. I have to RDP to an office machine's Outlook in order to add my own calendar entries if others are to see with Exchange's calendar, and for auto out-of-office messaging

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You're stuck with Outlook until you're dead, unless you're ready to upgrade from Exchange. I predict you will reject that suggestion.

      FWIW, I think most people's relatives just delete the deceased's mailserver rather than try to upgrade it, so if you're not willing to, they probably won't either. Death is an important technique to keep in mind, when you're trying to solve legacy problems. So my second suggestion is this: just wait this one out.

    • Thunderbird works with Exchange via imap without any plugin. The free Lightning plugin gives you calendar. Exquilla [thunderbird.net] gives you full Exchange compatibility, and used to cost money but is now free.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:21AM (#57078990)
    I pretty much quit using Thunderbird (and switched relatives/friends away) when it looked like Mozilla was pulling the rug out from under it:

    https://tech.slashdot.org/story/16/04/25/1949239/mozilla-seeks-new-home-for-email-client-thunderbird

    but I'm happy to see that someone did a little work to the old boy. However, did we really need a cut/paste of the unordered change notes? (Your top feature is "a delete button now allows the removal of a recipient" - really?)
    • I'd love to quit Thunderbird but what would I go to? I have 10 different IMAP/SMTP accounts that I need to send and receive mail from. I also need the client to run in Windows, something multi-platform is even better. Other that Outlook what other options are there?

    • After Kmail got assassinated by a hit squad of misty eye junior coders with "vision", Thunderbird was really the only workable option, even in the darkest days. Eventually Mozilla foundation recognized that Thunderbird users weren't going away and they sensibly got behind it again, while at the same time pulling out of some of their genuinely idiotic adventures. Starting to look a bit like sane governance now.

      • Damn you made me remember the old KMail from KDE3. I used it as my main email client at the time.

        It's KDE4 replacement was never worthy of the same name. I tried many times to use it, only to uninstall it ten minutes later.

    • What did you switch to?
      I've tried to find something better (even paid) that works on Linux and failed.
  • When the heck did that happen? I suppose that is what happens when you rely on your Linux distribution to provide Thunderbird, but still, I'd expect something that links off mozilla.org. I looked, and https://www.mozilla.org/thunde... [mozilla.org] redirects to https://www.thunderbird.net/en... [thunderbird.net] so its good, but my first reaction was - is this safe?
    • I was on the same boat. I opened the release notes and found out that auto-update does not work. It is sketchy at the least.
  • I use SeaMonkey as my email program. (Since I run it as my default browser)

    I did use Thunderbird a number of years ago

    I wonder if anyone still remembers Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and their puppets

  • Love for Thunderbird (Score:5, Interesting)

    by UPi ( 137083 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @11:56AM (#57079276) Homepage
    Let me just say that I love Thunderbird and I use it and recommend it wherever I can. It does exactly what I want and need from a graphical IMAP client, is rock solid, good safety track record. E-mail has been a stable protocol for decades, so it's natural the the software that deals with it is mature and doesn't require rapid releases. The little niceties mentioned in the linked article are good to have, but ultimately Thunderbird was already a great open source offering. Big thank you to the team.
    • Love is not the word that comes to mind, more like "greatly appreciate" and "depend on". And I greatly appreciate that Mozilla foundation is getting behind it again. Thunderbird would have done ok as an independent, 100% volunteer project but having some properly paid fulltime engineers on it makes a huge different to how fast broken things get fixed, never mind new functionality.

  • by nyet ( 19118 ) on Monday August 06, 2018 @12:07PM (#57079344) Homepage

    New Mail Notification Icon remains in Taskbar until manual "get new mail",

    https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/s... [mozilla.org]

    15 years old, still "minor" and "unclassified".

  • LDAP Write Support (Score:2, Interesting)

    by sarku ( 2047704 )
    17 year old feature request. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/s... [mozilla.org] The biggest feature that keeps enterprises from adopting TB.
    • I've been pretty happy with CardDAV [wikipedia.org] support via the CardBook addon [thunderbird.net], which lets me connect (read/write) to the same contact list as on my smart phone and web mail. CardDAV is an extension of WebDAV and implemented via HTTP rather than LDAP, but it's far more standardized and specialized to contact management.

      Perhaps you can connect via CalDAV to a DavMail [sourceforge.net] intermediary that then translates to LDAP. Perhaps your enterprise can maintain a global DavMail server to ease that. See also Bug 86405 comment 86 [mozilla.org], wh

  • How can one swap google for bing as the Thunderbird search engine? The plug-in that had done that no longer works.
  • It works as expected and has all the functionality you need. Just solid choice.

    But at the same time it has its weird quirks and barely moving when using big IMAP inboxes

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

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