Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Mozilla Thunderbird

Encyclopedia : M : MO : MOZ : Mozilla Thunderbird


Mozilla Thunderbird is a free, cross-platform e-mail and news client developed by the Mozilla Foundation. The project strategy is modeled after Mozilla Firefox, a project aimed at creating a smaller and faster web browser. Just as Firefox aims to redefine the web browser, Thunderbird is a refinement of the mail and news interface. On December 7, 2004, version 1.0 was released, and received over [500,000] downloads in its first three days of release (and [1,000,000] in 10 days). As of 25 June 2006, the download number has exceeded 27,750,000 since 1.0 release. A current download count odometer is available over at [The Rumbling Edge].

History

Various logos used during the development of Thunderbird

Originally launched as Minotaur shortly after Phoenix (the original name for Mozilla Firefox), the project failed to gain momentum. With the success of the latter, however, demand increased for a mail client to go with it, and the work on Minotaur was revived under the new name, and migrated to the new toolkit developed by the Firefox team.

Significant work on Thunderbird restarted with the announcement that from version 1.5 onwards, the main Mozilla suite would be designed around separate applications using this new toolkit. This contrasts with the previous all-in-one approach, and will hopefully lead to more efficient and maintainable code, as well as allowing users to mix and match the Mozilla applications with alternatives. Although this statement has since been retracted, the Mozilla Suite will continue to be released as one application while Firefox and Thunderbird are alternatives, it has continued to grow.

The original Thunderbird logo is just a modified Firebird logo: with a simple shifting of hue value from red to blue. In 2004, together with the change of Firefox's visual identity by Jon Hicks, a more professional logo that is currently in use was introduced in version 0.6.

On December 23, 2004, the Project Lightning was announced for tightly integrating calendar functionality (scheduling, tasks, etc.) into Thunderbird. Lightning is a project name, not a product name.

Features

Thunderbird aims to be a simple e-mail, newsgroup and news feed client. It is not a personal information manager. Additional features, if needed, are often available via extensions.

Message management

Thunderbird can manage multiple e-mail and newsgroup accounts and supports multiple identities within accounts. Features like quick search, saved search folders ("virtual folders"), advanced message filtering, message grouping, and labels can help manage and find messages. On Linux-based systems, system mail (movemail) accounts are supported.

Junk filtering

Thunderbird incorporates a Bayesian spam filter, a whitelist based on the included address book, and can also understand classifications by server-based filters such as SpamAssassin [Mozillazine Forums]

Extensions

Extensions allow the addition of extra features through the installation of XPInstall modules (known as "XPI" or "zippy" installation). One example is Enigmail, which uses OpenPGP for message encryption.[link]

Extensions and themes (below) available on the Mozilla Update site may be upgraded through a Web browser.

Themes

Thunderbird supports a variety of themes for changing its overall look and feel. These packages of CSS and image files can be downloaded from the Mozilla Update web site.

Standards support

Thunderbird supports POP and IMAP. It also supports LDAP address completion. Both reading and writing of HTML e-mails are supported. The built-in RSS/Atom reader can also be used as a simple news aggregator. Thunderbird supports the S/MIME standard and extensions like Enigmail add support for the OpenPGP standard.

Cross-platform support

Thunderbird runs on a wide variety of platforms. Releases available on the primary distribution site support the following operating systems [Thunderbird System Requirements]. Mozilla.org.:

Since the source code is available, it can also be compiled and run on a variety of other architectures and operating systems. Thus, Thunderbird is also available for many other systems.

Internationalization and localization

With contributors all over the world, the client is translated into at least 36 languages/locales, covering some of the least supported locales, such as Chichewa. Because of the use of DTD and property files for storing the string literals, part of the internationalization and localization job can be done easily by anyone without programming background, using simply a text editor.

Security

Thunderbird provides enterprise- and government-grade security features such as SSL/TLS connections to IMAP and SMTP servers. It also offers native support for S/MIME secure email (digital signing and message encryption using certificates). Any of these security features can take advantage of smartcards with the installation of additional extensions. Other security features can be added though extensions. For instance, Enigmail offers PGP signing, encryption, and decryption.

Optional security protections also include disabling loading of remote images within messages and disabling JavaScript.

Market adoption

As of April 2005, the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences was [making] a customized version of Mozilla Thunderbird available to students and faculty. According to an article posted on May 9, 2005, New York University's Stern School of Business had also [started] using the open source e-mail client. Starting 2005 fall, the Networking Services and Information Technology department of University of Chicago will [include both Firefox and Thunderbird in its connectivity package] for all incoming students. More recently, Saint Louis University's College of Arts & Science has adopted Thunderbird as its e-mail client of choice.

Portable Versions of Thunderbird

John T. Haller has developed [Portable Thunderbird] as one of the major offsprings of the Thunderbird project. Portable Thunderbird is a mobile version of Thunderbird that allows you to carry your whole e-mail client and all your contacts with you on an iPod, USB flash drive, Zip drive, portable hard drive or any other portable media. You can plug it into any Windows computer and use it just like you would a locally-installed version. It retains nearly all of Thunderbird's functionality and includes a specialized launcher that allows extensions to be portable as well. It also uses UPX compression to reduce the overall footprint making Portable Thunderbird load quickly from a USB device. It is also available with GPG and Enigmail preconfigured for those that encrypt and sign their e-mail. There is also a portable version of Thunderbird for Mac OS X [link].

There is a distribution called the Mobility Email client that makes use of Mozilla Mail (Thunderbird) code and aspects of the portable launcher code used in the now-defunct [Portable Thunderbird with Enigmail (PTEG)] maintained by John Urbanek. It supports the S/MIME and OpenPGP signing and encryption standards, as well as the forthcoming DSA2 and SHA224 technologies, and is backward compatible with TIGER192. It allows users to lock their passwords, mail, and account details with AES256 symmetrical encryption. It has pre-installed support for Webmail accounts like Hotmail, Yahoo!, and AOL. The Mobility Email client works on Windows 98/ME/2000/XP/2003 PCs and GNU/Linux machines through the WINE API.

Criticisms

As for Firefox, the Mac OS X version is poorly integrated and generally considered inferior to other ports.

Possible deficiencies

Mozilla Thunderbird lacks a number of features that are found in other e-mail clients:

Release History

It has been suggested that this section be [Merging and moving pagesmerged] into [History of Mozilla Thunderbird]. (:Wikipedia talk:History of Mozilla Thunderbird}}})
[List of all Thunderbird releases]

Footnotes

See also

  1. redirect

External links

Wikinews has news related to:

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: