Nice! A big thanks to the dev team that keeps this project going. Can’t wait to see what finds its way into K9 (and the rebrand!).
Thanks for reminding me to check my emails.
Also Thunderbird is great. Big thanks to the developers.
The new inbox is a lot easier on the eyes. I’m loving it.
Yea it looks awesome, another W for the open-source community!
I honestly love the new nested replies in email chains they added to the inbox view a few months ago. It makes a messy inbox so much less messy looking
i’ve been on it for a while since i’m on the beta channel but it’s such a nice release. the thunderbird does good work and i urge you to do a monthly donation to them.
Gonna second this! They deserve every penny they get!
I’m a longtime Thunderbird user and don’t get all the changes they make. It’s a good functional client. I would rather want to see the parts not neccessary needed for an email client to able to disable, such as Calendar, Tasks and Chat. I use the RSS Reader, so that News REader functionality would be on for me. But can’t we disable all the other modules?
This and an first party integrated system tray icon showing number of unread messages would be extremely helpful (and maybe optional notifications). I’m baffled why these things are not builtin, but a Chat?
I would be in favor of having these things as modules you can compile in or leave out.
Addons would not be possible as they probably do too much stuff.
100% on the notifications, tray icons dont matter, but working desktop notifications are a must and it is insane that they dont work.
Well I don’t agree on that tray icons wouldn’t matter. They are very useful. But either way, it would be good to have the option for these two very basic and important functionality. On the compile flags, that would even be better, as these modules wouldn’t be in the final binary / install anymore.
But I would be just happy if we could turn the modules off in the options, so the actual Thunderbird client is less cluttered, less possibilities of bugs affecting me and lighter on resources. Why not get rid of them entirely and make standalone applications? It would free some development resources too, for the core Thunderbird mail client.
Maybe switching to a lighter alternative is a good idea.
The biggest effect would be ditching Firefox ESR and running as a webapp.
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Lets test that exchange feature right away!
Exchange features aren’t in yet. They plan to release it in a 128.x version as it wasn’t ready for today due to technical reasons.
The article explains its available as an experimental option tucked away in the options
The target moved again?
Better than releasing unfinished stuff. We are talking about a syncing protocol and potential data loss here.
Looks very slick, just wished i had the paid version of proton to be able to try it out
Not to be that guy, but they fixed the IMAP data eating bug in 128 right? Somebody put me at ease please.
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1891416
You mean this one?
Did they find a way to cram even more stuff into the title bar?
I can’t click to raise thunderbird from behind another window without clicking on something “functional” anymore…
Man, I’m having such a bad day for trying to click on “dead space” on a window where there is none. Sounds like tbird drove off the same cliff.
Hrm… I just changed (in KDE) “right click” in inactive windows to be “Activate and Raise” rather than “Activate, raise and pass click”. I never liked this behavior for left-click before, but maybe having it as a right-click will help.
Apart from the message filter bar…
How I wish Firefox forked and ran like this rather than be beholden to the ad money of Google.
Once your concussion goes away, you should rewrite this.
Lol. If you replace “with” with “wish” it should make more sense.
There’s unfortunately no getting around that maintaining a secure and performant web engine is a highly expensive endeavour. There’s a reason why it’s just Google, Mozilla, and Apple left (and Apple doesn’t even try to implement all the web standards).
If not Google, it’d probably be Bing, or some other extremely wealthy company trying to get something out of Mozilla.
Every time Mozilla has tried to diversify their income, people complain about them trying to make money/commercialise. I mean I don’t like it either, but they’re in a tough spot.
They’re seen as evil bastards if they take money, and they’re seen as evil bastards when they try to make money.
At least with Google there’s a possible antitrust case if they suddenly pulled funding, given their market position, and that gives Mozilla a bit more leverage than I think they’d get with other deals.
I’m not disagreeing on them being in a tough spot when they try making money, but the corporate side of Mozilla does some shady financial stuff, only to pay their CEO.
Would break the fingers of the designer who, starting with 115, messed up the layout and removed the ability to keep tabs at the top of the window. Why the hell should I search there? What was the problem with searching in the toolbar?