Mozilla Thunderbird (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
To be technically corerct, support for movemail accounts was removed from TB in version 87. Change log.
This was a useful feature. TB would pull Linux system spool mail into a local TB account. This allowed users, even simple home users and not just admins, to view the system mail in a GUI mail client.
For many years I used the TB movemail feature. For years I have had all systems in the home LAN forward system mails to my primary account on the office desktop, which is where I use TB for all mail, including online addresses. The TB movemail feature was wonderfully handy to consolidate and read all system mails in a GUI mail client.
If using a GUI mail client is desired to read spool mail then an alternate client such as Sylpheed is needed. Of course, if TB is the primary mail client then this requires using two different clients. There are console options such as mutt, [al]pine, and mailx. As mentioned a full blown mail system could be installed and configured to forward system mails to a fully qualified mail address.
I get that the feature might have been used by few people. And that we Linux users are not a majority. Removing that feature is one thing. That the feature was removed quietly without notable forewarning is frustrating because few TB users are going to follow bug reports. A change log note is ex post facto and surprises users.
(Snarky side comment: I detest rapid release.)
Add your account to Thunderbird, which is one of the most capable e-mail clients. It looks old-school, but it's a highly sophisticated program. After it has imported all of your messages (which may take a while depending on your Internet connection and computer), go to Extras -> Add-ons and search for this add-on:
https://addons.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/addon/importexporttools-ng/
After having installed it, click on one of the e-mails, press CTRL-A to select all messages, then click on file in the top left corner of the program -> Save selected messages -> PDF format. It'll bring up a bunch of warnings, including that you can't re-import these files into the e-mail client and that attachments will not be saved. Confirm these warnings and it'll save the files to a folder specified by you. Make sure there's plenty of space on your storage device and don't do this five minutes before the end of your shift, as this should take a few minutes.
Note that if you want embedded remote pictures to be saved in these PDFs (which Thunderdbird hides by default for safety and privacy reasons), you need to go to Thunderbird's privacy settings and tick "Allow remote content in messages" before doing the above.
Mozilla Thunderbird (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
Thunderbird 60 is just around the corner and will bring a Quantum-inspired UI (mainly square tabs and modern icons) besides many improvements: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/60.0beta/releasenotes/
I'm very happy to see this revived effort put into my favourite mail client!
To stay on top of German public holidays, you can subscribe to this webcalendar.
For Allerheiligen it says: "Christlicher Feiertag. Nur in Baden-Württemberg, Bayern, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Rheinland-Pfalz und Saarland."
Try clearing cache:
Press Ctrl-Shift-Delete (Mac: Cmd-Shift-Delete) Set 'Time range...' to 'Everything' Untick all items except 'Cache' Clear, then restart FF
If that fails, try disabling all addons.
If that fails, see if it misbehaves in Troubleshooting mode (TB menu > Help > Restart...).
If all fail, reinstall from https://www.thunderbird.net/
If that fails, un-reinstall. Un/reinstall should keep your profile (data).
If that fails, create a new profile (https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/profile-manager-create-and-remove-thunderbird-profiles?redirectslug=profile-manager-create-and-remove-thunderbird-prof&redirectlocale=en-US).
I use Thunderbird It will download all your emails from a number of different email clients and you can then decide which emails you want to store on your computer. I now have my Yahoo email accounts on there and will be adding my GMail account. You can also email or delete from the program. I have not explored everything that it can do, but since Yahoo took away groups, I've been worried about losing all my Yahoo emails too.
The Thunderbird foundation and mzla technologies has a handful of people working on it. The work is largely funded by donations. They currently have 3 job postings open.
It would probably take an old style news group reader where you would have to download all the headers first.
I believe Thunderbird can be configured to read usenet posts. Add in the ImportExportTools and export the posts.
I haven't tried this, so no guarantee that it would work.
Forte Agent also has an option to export messages, File menu->Save Messages As...
Thunderbird - Address book (check all tabs), it's available for Windows, Lunux, Mac OS.
MyPhoneExplorer - with this program it's possible to synchronize contacts on Android with Thunderbird (I'm just not sure if it's all items, probably not, so it's recommended to use data from PC/Thunderbird).
<strong>Mozilla Thunderbird</strong> (portable) - (with Automatic Dictionary, MyPhoneExplorer) email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
<strong>MyPhoneExplorer</strong> - Android smartphone sync software (intuitive, easy to use, many features, 1-click sync all, backup, portable mode...)
Both programs are free.
Any reason why you downloaded 32-bit version? From ldd
output, no library is missing. But at same time, it doesn't list gtk3
library so it is probably loaded explicitly by program and it is probably looking for 32-bin version.
Note that Thunderbird-52.9.1 can be installed with # apt-get install thunderbird
.
You can download 64-bit version here: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/. 64-bit version worked on my station (Debian stable).
It bothers me more that people even use the (hopelessly incomplete and buggy) Maill app at all.
Just yesterday I had someone ask me why there are no attachments showing in some emails, while they do show in the webmail. Well, because the Mail app is shit! That's why!
Either cough up the money to use Outlook, or download Thunderbird.
I have no idea if the installer that they offer as a download at https://www.thunderbird.net/ is 64-bit or auto-detects that and installs the appropriate version.
Everything I see indicates that the installer they push out is for the 32-bit version. https://www.ghacks.net/2018/08/07/how-to-migrate-32-bit-thunderbird-to-64-bit-on-windows/ explains why that might be. It's dated 2019 but it still appears to be valid. It also includes info on how to get the 64-bit installer. All of this was found through Google searches.
You don‘t need a payed account for thunderbird.
https://www.thunderbird.net/ is the software I‘m talking about. The best way to install these programs is to use the package manager (called ‚add/remove software‘ in the launcher) and search for them by name.
Also you can use IMAP for E-Mail sync. Just google „imap settings gmail“ If you are concerned about security: e-Mail is not encrypted by default. Not even Gmail.
Don’t worry about your E-Mail getting hacked from using a client. Geary stores your login info only on your computer and not in the cloud much like the Website would.
Also e-Mail is a standard so Geary is no more of a third Party app for E-Mail than Firefox is a third Party app for the Internet.
So you have to add repos and install packages. There are GUIs for that. There have been GUIs for that in Ubuntu for years. The instructions simply give terminal commands because they're easy to copy and paste and easier to make than a mess of screenshots.
Another thing you might think is that you don't have to use a package manager to install Thunderbird on Windows, anyways! Yeah, well, you don't have to on Linux, either. Unpack the tarball wherever you want and you can just run it from there. Or you can use the Thunderbird AppImage for a one-file, one-click solution that will even create launchers for you. There are alternative WhatsApp clients that have AppImages as well.
What I would do is download Thunderbird (an opensource email client) https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/ set it up to get you email from yahoo using POP. This will copy your email to your computer locally where you can then export it from Thunderbird to any external backup of your choice.
Not sure if I would trust any corporation that harvests data such as google or Micro$oft for encryption. I use Horde groupware with PGP keys but in order to send encrypted emails, you’ll also need associates who also utilizes PGP, since you’ll have to exchange public keys with them to make sure they can read your encrypted messages.
​
Another option is using Thunderbird. This is a free email program that also allows you to use encryption keys.
​
If you do not have a private email server that uses Horde or thunderbird, there are email services available for 20.00-50.00/year that offer Horde and encryption keys with your account. I am using a service from edu-email.com for 20.00/ year. The email account I was given was an actual .edu domain and used it for a few student discounts which was a bonus!
Can you access the options through the popup panel? (I don't have TB60 at the moment so I can't test).
Edit: In the release notes it says:
> Add-on options can no longer be configured from the Add-on Manager page. A new menu item "Add-on Options" is now available on the Tools menu.
Thank you for posting this. I found a Mozilla changelog page saying, only,
> Thunderbird version 60 is currently only offered as direct download from thunderbird.net and not as upgrade from Thunderbird version 52 or earlier.
and I wondered why - why this was the case and why there was no explanation of why it was the case.
EDIT: so there's the beta and then the, what? unofficial gamma, unofficial release candidate? Fair enough though, perhaps.
> Mozilla has pushed only security fixes for years now.
This is incorrect in two ways:
1) For years now the community has been driving and shipping Thunderbird releases, and development, not Mozilla. See https://blog.mozilla.org/thunderbird/
2) The community has been delivering more than security fixes in every version (38, 45, 52). Take a spin through the release notes and you can see the changes are significant. https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/releases/
Sort of. If you check out Thunderbird Beta, you can see that they are theming it to look like the new Firefox: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/channel/
However, under the hood, I'm not sure if there are going to be any significant changes like using WebExtension-based Thunderbird extensions.
Yeah, it's a morass!
Thunderbird, if I'm not mistaken, has a plugin for loading MBOX files. Then you can search and export (to EML I think). Portable version you don't even have to install on Portableapps.com.
AId4Mail Converter seems to be free. Haven't tested it. They have a more beefy payware also.
Good luck!
i'm sure people in /r/slavelabor can migrate your stuff cheap-ish-ly, but if you want to do it for free/do-it-yourself, you can use Thunderbird to download all your emails from google workspace and upload them on the dreamhost email account.
btw "unlimited" emails are included in "Dreamhost Shared Unlimited", if you upgrade to unlimited, dreamhost should be able to host all your emails for... well, the current price is 10.99/month if you use the 3-year commitment, so 10.99/month
If you want something that is free:
Thunderbird with the Conversations add-on. This lets you group your mail by conversation. There's also a "print conversation" action at the end of each conversation (in the details view).
Hey! If it is still actual. I like Thunderbird and Mailbird. But the last one supports Windows only. So, I’d like to use Thunderbird a little bit more.
If it is still actual. I use Thunderbird. I really like it. Check it out! Also, I have used Mailbird, but it supports only Windows, so when I changed to Mac, I had to look for another client, and then I found Thunderbird and didn't even think to change to another one.
Sorry, to hear that. I think you should try a new email client like Thunderbird or Mailbird. You can filter all your emails, and each newsletter will be in separate folders. Or you can sort them by hashtags or senders etc.
Okay, let us take thunderbird (an open source mail client) as an example.
Go to: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/ and press download that should download the latest thunderbird disk image file (dmg). In the download folder double click the dmg file to launch the installer and then follow the instructions.
​
But don't just willy nilly download stuff. Check that it is safe to use and so on :)
Try installing going back a version to Thunderbird 78 instead - that's the one those extensions were designed for.
Link to the Mozilla site for most recent version of 78: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/78.13.0/releasenotes/
91 just came out at the end of August, so all the extensions haven't had the chance to update and catch up yet.
Free free to DM if you need more help! I may not respond quickly though haha
You can get likely do a bulk export in whatever app they're using currently. If the default Windows Mail won't import that backup, I'd be shocked if Mozilla Thunderbird couldn't (it's Mozilla's response to Outlook, much like how Firefox was a response to IE).
It's in the release channel, now, version 91.0.2:
https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/91.0.2/releasenotes/
Preference for disabling the unread message count badge on Windows taskbar icon added: mail.biff.show_badge
I've been having similar issues. Works fine on first launch but then any new emails that come in during that session quite often don't work.
I've just updated to the latest version (https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/91.0/releasenotes/) and so far, it's been working perfectly.
> Thunderbird version 91.0 is only offered as direct download from thunderbird.net and not as an upgrade from Thunderbird version 78 or earlier. A future release will provide updates from earlier versions.
That sounded weird but reviewing the release notes I see this is their recent pattern for major-number releases, even the large jumps from one number to another (78 to 91). Why, though?
I've seen issues with Outlook and IMAP at times, and find Thunderbird to be an excellent replacement. https://www.thunderbird.net So if you continue to see issues give it a go. It looks very much like Outlook and other email clients too, so user adoption should be easy.
As I understand it, the beta has native support for Apple Silicon as of version 87.
I'll update if I can find any information about the release channel.
Had a long bout with an angry customer over how long things were taken to get done. It was getting to the point where our boss was pulling time sheets and asking us to provide explanations as to why the customer should be billed for each hour.
When we had to make software modifications (usually due to their request), we had to send them time "estimates", which we could not go over.
I still get tense if I hear the outlook incoming email tone, and it's been 8 months. I changed my work email specifically to an "Oh No!" sound-byte. (Outlook for Android. On PC, I use Thunderbird
I even didn't mention ppa, I have no idea why you compare snap to it.
> If you don't trust Canonical
Trusting to Canonical doesn't make all apps coming from snap secure and it shouldn't. Canonical doesn't owns all apps there.
> It's possible but has a technical barrier, requires root access, and requires recreating it
So, no extra security compared to deb. I don't think that attacker have problems with technical barriers.
> That is better security than the alternative where entire binaries, scripts, configs can be wiped/replaced/modified by ppa just by doing sudo apt install.
But still less secure than just unpacking tar bundle https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/all/#E
Maybe not a perfect solution, but after you export your contacts (from Contacts), you can import the .vcf file to Thunderbird, and then export from there to .csv, which will open in Excel.
> They're fine, but you cannot centrally upgrade them unlike Flatpak or snap which is a huge inconvenience.
I don't need central upgrade, I don't find it convenient. I prefer to decide myself what and when to upgrade.
Also inventing yet another packaging formats was very stupid idea. Now I have to use both snap and flatpak because some apps distributed via snap, some via flatpak. I hate that. The benefit of AppImage is that it doesn't depend on package manager, just take and execute, it most genius format among these.
But, inventing appimage was not necessary though, tarballs are ok too. For example, Mozilla distributes tarballs for many years and it works great: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/all/
I've switched to emClient for my email/calendar, it is free for up to 2 accounts but I just decided to buy it. UWP Windows Mail is just well yeah, too bad because back in the day the desktop app was quite good. Thunderbird works well but is dated in so many ways (free though).
If you mean Movemail, it was removed in 87beta.
​
https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/87.0beta/releasenotes/
Never forget "the cloud" is someone else's computer. Especially if you're using a free-tier service.
On a practical level at least backup your email with Thunderbird and your Google Drive and contacts with Syncdocs.
I use gmail on my android phone, I dont know if you can do that on a computer. However thunderbird is a pretty good desktop email client. https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/
On Mailbox.org if you add @example.com as email alias you're free to use *@example.com (I mean , etc.) as sender without any previous setup, so you don't have to create any other alias on server side. Of course you need a client like Thunderbird allowing to freely edit your From shield.
+1 I'm using portable version, easy to backup, no need to (re)install.
Mozilla Thunderbird (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
This has nothing to do with upgrading from 68 to 78, and Thunderbird even says on their website that you can't upgrade directly from 68 to 78.
Maybe see https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/get-involved/#development
There is bug-filing, which maybe is used for enhancement requests too: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/describecomponents.cgi?product=Thunderbird
If you just want cosmetic changes for your own local use, I think you can rewrite the CSS that Thunderbird uses in your local copy.
https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/
Similar to what u/thispenforhire said, but not Microsoft. :-)
You can run Thunderbird on your desktop/laptop and pull email in from whatever accounts you need to.
> Thunderbird (no longer updated) was the one i used
That's not even remotely true. I've used Thunderbird for decades and they update quite regularly.
In fact, they released an updated version today.
https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/78.6.0/releasenotes/
I've used it for POP and IMAP without any issues. I have email archives dating back to the late 1990s.
There is no Windows Gmail app, although you can create a browser shortcut that sort of looks like one.
Or you can install a general purpose email client like Thunderbird.
>Is it worth going through the process to set up encryption for my email?
If you don't want third parties reading your email then yes, of course.
To be able to read your work emails at home would require you to transfer your client S/MIME certificate to your computer. You would probably want to ask about that first to see if that is something that is allowed. There are lots of email clients that support S/MIME. This is a popular one:
Relevant:
I would recommend you <strong>Thunderbird</strong> as It is functional and has a large number of extensions. All my friends use it without any difficulties. However, the interface leaves much to be desired. It's quite boring.
Also, they recommended me Mailbird, but, unfortunately, it doesn’t support Linux yet. :(((
As far as I am concerned, the most important thing is to divide work and private life. So I suggest for everyone who has their own business to create a support email where employees may read, answer, and support every client. It will add a few points as prompt assistance to the consumers. I am completely satisfied with Mailbird and Thunderbird's work in this case.
I prefer <strong>Thunderbird</strong> and <strong>Mailbird</strong>. Both of them are safe, private, fast, simple and at the same time powerful ones. Nevertheless, Mailbird supports Windows only.
And an alternative for Google Drive, I know that Mega has 50 GB free. But I’m not sure if it is as safe as people say.
Well, I use the Mailbird. But my friends who are using Thunderbird responded that the Windows version works well. Many of them don’t find limitations, others said that despite taking up a lot of space, Thunderbird is a fast, safe, easy to use, functional email app.
+1
Mozilla Thunderbird (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
They're on 78.3.3 now, and the message about not auto-updating has been removed from the release notes. Previous releases explicitly stated:
> Thunderbird version 78.1.0 is only offered as direct download from thunderbird.net and not as an upgrade from Thunderbird version 68 or earlier.
I'm curious if this tweet is still applicable.
My TOP-3.
Best Windows email client for people who live in their inbox
Features:
Best Windows email client for echoing the browser experience
Features:
Best Windows email client for multilingual email exchanges
Features:
Not 10 versions, Thunderbird jumped from 68 to 78 and development continued on both versions as 78 was incompatible/broke a lot of things. 78 was only available as a direct download from the site for a long time (see the release notes). It appears the newest version doesn't have the "upgrade" verbage and might actually be worth looking at, but it is not likely it would be put into 32 due to the updates policy unless there were security updates.
Thunderbird should be updated to 68.12.0 which is a little less than a month old. There are some security updates. It looks like a package is built but was never submitted to bodhi.
If communicating very sensitive information unfortunately it’s going to take some effort on the part of the people you’re exchanging with. PGP or OMEMO/XMPP are what you want.
I do know what you mean, XMPP can be a pain in the ass. Perhaps PGP could be easier? Use Thunderbird as your e-mail client. Once your plug your PGP information into Thunderbird it’s fairly painless.
Wickr Me is super simple to use, and can handle file transfers. It has mobile and desktop clients. People may have some arguments against it. I’d say it just depends on your threat model.
Thunderbird 78 does not support upgrading from an earlier version until 78.2 is released (due to the lack of support for the Enigmail extension, which is required for PGP encryption):
>Thunderbird version 78.0 is only offered as direct download from thunderbird.net and not as an upgrade from Thunderbird version 68 or earlier.
(https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/78.0/releasenotes/)
Thus, Thunderbird 78 will probably only arrive in the repos starting with version 78.2.
Using it for my work on linux and macOS, and at home on windows10 and no problems at all...
I am not advicing you to switch back to 60.9 like some others sa.. Lot a security fixes since the new version..
You should wait for the v76 which comes with a lot of UI fixes: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/76.0beta/releasenotes/
You won't be able to import the MBOX directly, but you can setup Thunderbird, and use a plugin called ImportExportTools. The file will first import as a local folder, then you can move the messages to your Gmail folders.
> Is it even supported any longer?
Yep - https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/68.4.1/releasenotes/
Even ships with a nice dark mode now.
<strong>Mozilla Thunderbird</strong> (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs,, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
I saw your post that you don't like Thunderbird, but perhaps you could try it - it has addons, themes, dark mode, customizable layout...
For the VERY latest (72.0b2 at the moment), https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/beta/all/
I download it and then:
# quit out of Thunderbird app sudo bash mv thunderbird-.bz2 /opt && cd /opt rm -fr thunderbird tar xvjf thunderbird-.bz2 rm thunderbird-*.bz2
Some things stopped working in newer versions. For example, Enigmail doesn't work.
Indeed, the release numbering and schedule of releases of Thunderbird has been this way for over 7 years. There are no plans to change.
Also, Mozilla does not maintain nor release Thunderbird - it's the Thunderbird community. https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/get-involved/
As for using beta, they are under constant change with absolutely no assurance of whether certain add-ons will work. If a beta works and is useful to someone then we love to see it get used and tested. If it doesn't work for someone, the only recourse is to not use it - use a release version.
Thunderbird version numbering is a bit confusing, because they follow the firefox version numbers, but stable thunderbirds are only released on top of firefox esr versions (esr= extended support release)
The current firefox esr is 68, the next firefox esr will be 78, so the current stable Thunderbird is 68, the next stable will be 78, so no 71 or 72 stables will be released.
I don't find any info on the numbering of beta thunderbirds, but I guess they are numbered as the current beta of firefox.
Only webextension based addons are available since 68, so every addon which works with 68 should work with any future releases. (until they change the addon architecture again... but it won't happen in the foreseeable future, webextension is a standard, also used for chrome and firefox addons)
More info:
You can see thunderbird version numbers are not sequential: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/releases/
You can see that firefox esr verion numbers are the same as thunderbird versions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefox_version_history#Firefox_68.3esr
From the release notes:
Thunderbird version 68.1.2 is only offered as direct download from thunderbird.net and not as upgrade from Thunderbird version 60 or earlier. A future version 68.2 will provide updates from earlier versions.
https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/68.1.2/releasenotes/
Going to Thunderbirds website https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/
Clicking any of those shows v.68, so that must be a new version, that's dated to August of this year, checking Mozilla's blogs on both their site and Thunderbirds corroborates this, auto updates don't show anything for some reason.
Please note that your ProtonMail plan should reflect your storage needs given the amount of emails you have.
Hope this helps.
I've very good news for you. Coming with 68.1.0 released today:
​
>Offer to configure Exchange accounts for Office365. A third-party add-on is required for this account type. IMAP still exists as alternative.
Full changelog here: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/68.1.0/releasenotes/
Yes, however auto update will work for 68.1
So if anyone want to update to 68 automatically, just have to wait
> Thunderbird version 68.0 is only offered as direct download from thunderbird.net and not as upgrade from Thunderbird version 60 or earlier. A future version 68.1 will provide updates from earlier versions.
Source: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/68.0/releasenotes/
I use Thunderbird for it. It's not eating a lot of resources on my 6-year-old computer. Though, I can't say for the ricing side (I'm just started into ricing a week ago). Anyways, here's a sample of the email client in my ricing setup (can't guarantee it's cool, though).
If you're looking for a nice free and open source alternative Thunderbird is pretty well loved. Used to use it, but I cut down on bloat and switched back to Apple Mail, which is fine for me since I don't use signatures or rules (I'm a pretty pedestrian e-mailer). Give it a shot if none of the other options suit you!
Hmm. I know you can download it from https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/all/ (disregard the URL; it leads to current downloads for all OSes and localizations). And searching for australia on their support forum shows someone using it. So it should be available, just not through the App Store.
Thunderbird releases are in sync with Firefox ESR. You could say that Thunderbird is by default ESR.
Check out the Firefox ESR release overview, then take a look at Thunderbird releases.
>There are about 3 or 4 different settings pages, from what I can tell. This is beyond unintuitive. You should always have one settings button for one application, then subdivide the different settings areas within it.
>
>Agreed. But I hope you know that such a flattened organization is fairly recent design concept for many programs. IIRC Firefox for example only has it in the last year or so. Thunderbird will get there in due course.
In version 68 the new account confiration is getting a big refresh - beta in a couple weeks.
In version 76 we expect account and options will be unified. Beta for that perhaps late summer.
Probably Mac Bug 1425656 - Sometimes modal dialog open at wrong location, sometimes unusable (Mac) which should get better in version 68.
Beta available shortly.
Are all of these accounts on the same domain that you own? This is assuming that the answer is yes, and you're using GSuite.
Have your 3 employees as "real GMail accounts". Convert all of the rest (I assume they're real GMail accounts with shared login credentials) to distribution lists to go to the 3 employees.
On all 3 of the real employee's GMail's, configure the rest of the "people" as EMail aliases, or additional identities, whatever GMail calls it.
Make sure that when someone responds as one of these "users", that Person 1 BCC's Person 2 and Person 3 for record.
It is not web based but I would like to plug [https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/](Mozilla Thunderbird) - it is a desktop (Mac and Windows) EMail client. Thunderbird's additional identities are pretty flexible. If you have , you can configure to have it's own From name, EMail signature, etc. When Thunderbird senses a message was sent to - it will adopt that identity in the From: address and apply the relevant signature. Again, BCC person 2 and 3 :)
The posts are from olduse.net, which is replaying a Usenet archive from 30 years ago in real time. The easiest way to read them is by pointing a modern newsreader like Mozilla Thunderbird to nntp.olduse.net
By 1989, there are quite a few active groups under comp.* and rec., and the alt. groups are just starting to appear.
You can just download the zip file from thunderbird.net. make sure you allow it to run with chmod. Then just add it to your /usr/bin and kde menu
Ich empfehle Mozilla Thunderbird, mann kann fast jedes Email-Dienst mit der Software synchronisieren lassen und benutzerdefinierte Regeln für bestimmte E-Mails erstellen.
It seems that your comment contains 1 or more links that are hard to tap for mobile users. I will extend those so they're easier for our sausage fingers to click!
Here is link number 1 - Previous text "tar"
^Please ^PM ^/u/eganwall ^with ^issues ^or ^feedback! ^| ^Delete
Yeah, for some reason I could never find it there either, even the older versions. I just downloaded the tar directly from Mozilla and followed the instructions page for Linux. Kind of a hassle, but it's worth it; I'm really digging the new version.
>What website can I use to setup my work email so I can send and receive the emails on my computer?
Webmail is one thing but it is apparent that your company does not use webmail. You need to download, install, and set up an email client such as Thunderbird. https://www.thunderbird.net/en-GB/
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That's bascally correct, although most servers don't have anti-virus in the way you would think of it (which in and of itself isn't a very useful tool as it can only sometimes clean up a mess instead of prevent it). Servers & clients are exposed to the internet and when properly maintained, are patched frequently for known exploits.
If you use an e-mail browserthat is unpatched you won't get fixes as things are discovered - for example, a few months ago a security flaw was revealed if you were using HTML in your e-mail extensions (https://www.cnet.com/news/security-flaw-could-expose-your-encrypted-emails-researchers-warn/).
Thunderbird had the situation figured out within 24 hours (https://blog.mozilla.org/thunderbird/2018/05/efail-and-thunderbird/) and then a patch to fix the problem within a few days (https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/52.8.0/releasenotes/). Unsupported clients are still exposed to that exploit.
I've never used Claws mail. I do not know if it's reputable, good, or secure.
Might I recommend Thunderbird? It's free, open source, supports some really wonderful add-ons, themes, and Google Calendar integration.
With Thunderbird, all you need know is your google account, a password, and (if enabled - it should be cough cough) two-factor authentication. It will auto-detect ports, servers, etc for you.
No, don't bother. 2007 is WAY out of date, but should not be affected by Windows 7 updates.
You *could* of course install a far superior, better supported mail client though.
He does not want to know what transferring domains is like. It's hell. Avoid if at all possible.
If he doesn't like Outlook, (I dont' blame him) there's nothing at all stopping him from accessing his email with a different (better) mail client or by hitting it in a web browser.
I use Mozilla Thunderbird as my eMail application. This way I avoid the add-riddeled website of my free eMail service. I use Enigmail as a plugin to encrypt my eMails. Unfortunately, not many people use encryption so in most cases, I can only sign my eMails.