posts tagged with “thunderbird”

Impact Mozilla, Thunderbird 3.0b1, and Firefox 3.1b2!


Voting has begun for the Impact Mozilla contest, and after taking a look at all of the finalists, I was very excited to see that about half of them involve using add-ons to promote Firefox and increase retention. Check out the finalists and vote before next Wednesday!

Today, Thunderbird 3 beta 1 was released. I tried it out and immediately switched to using it as my default client. The upgrade from 2.0 was seamless, and I’m really enjoying the new features and interface. Of course, one of my favorites is the new Add-ons Manager, first introduced in Firefox 3. It will now be possible to install extensions from AMO directly in Thunderbird by searching for them in the Add-ons Manager.


Speaking of beta releases, Firefox 3.1 beta 2 was released yesterday with Private Browsing mode, TraceMonkey turned on, and one of my favorite less-announced features: being able to drag the window around on Mac from any part of the chrome (also available in Thunderbird 3.0b1!).

Lots of exciting things so far this week, and it’s only Tuesday!

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Thunderbird rocks.

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I started using Mozilla Thunderbird a few weeks ago for a new e-mail address that I wanted to keep separate from GMail. I’ve been using GMail for almost 3 years and hadn’t considered switching because I was too accustomed to archiving and never deleting, and using labels instead of folders.

It turns out that Thunderbird 2.0 includes many awesome new features that enable it to be more like GMail, so I decided to give it a try.

Archiving

I’m using an IMAP server, so messages aren’t stored locally. In order to save them all, I setup a message filter on all messages that copies them to the “Archive” folder I created.

Labels

Thunderbird 2.0 introduces support for tags, which are similar to labels but even better, as they can have different colors. You can setup search folders that display all e-mails with a certain tag, just like in GMail, as shown on the left.

Extensions

I have the following extensions installed:

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Lightning

Lightning is a calendar extension for Thunderbird based on the Mozilla Calendar Project (Sunbird).

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Provider for Google Calendar

Provider for Google Calendar is an extension that allows Lightning to read and write to your Google calendars as if you were using the GCal interface.

MinimizeToTray

MinimizeToTray lets you minimize Thunderbird to the system tray instead of to the taskbar. It also works with other Mozilla applications (Firefox, SeaMonkey, Sunbird, etc.) on Windows.

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Quicktext

Quicktext allows you to set templates that you can easily insert in e-mails.

QuoteCollapse

QuoteCollapse collapses inline quotes in e-mail messages.

Signature Switch

Signature Switch allows you to easily switch between signatures.

I also happen to have my extensions Password Exporter and FavLoc installed, but that’s a given.

Download it!

Get Thunderbird!

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