I use Thunderbird only for reading newsgroups. The reason why I don't
use Thunderbird for E-mail is that there are too many open bug reports
that affect my use. Before adding new features, make sure the existing
features work correctly.
--
David E. Ross
<http://www.rossde.com/>
Go to Mozdev at <http://www.mozdev.org/> for quick access to
extensions for Firefox, Thunderbird, SeaMonkey, and other
Mozilla-related applications. You can access Mozdev much
more quickly than you can Mozilla Add-Ons.
From bugzilla, based oh your cc: and authorship, I don't see any
normal->blocker bugs that aren't news related that fit "existing
features [not] working correctly".
Which functional categories and major bugs are you concerned about that
you think affect a lot of people?
> [I'd forgotten to include seamonkey on the list, so posting here as
> well, followup to thunderbird newsgroup. Apologies. --da]
(If that has not already been said (as I'm not reading m.d.a.tb))
Trying to coordinate/synchronize Thunderbird and SeaMonkey (work) is
always appreciated, on all the "duplicated" parts, on "Lightning"
integration for example...
I never add myself to the CC: lists of bug reports. Instead, I rely on
a query on the bug numbers of those bugs I wish to track. I run that
query twice each week.
Among the non-enhancement bug reports that I'm tracking are the
following Thunderbird or (for older bug reports) Mozilla bugs that
affect mail (not just news): 215401, 273997, and 410833. Yes, none of
these are significant. But added to others, I'm more comfortable with a
very old version of Eudora as my E-mail client.
Additionally, unless I misunderstand it, I feel that the fix to bug
#116443 is deficient. If a virus slips through because it is so new
that is not yet addressed by the virus definitions used by my anti-virus
software, my inbox or other folder will be lost when I do update my
virus definitions to address it.
Then there are bugs #285715 and #363302. These are marked as
Resolved/Invalid. To users of PGP, however, these are quite valid.
Other E-mail clients handle these situations (and bug #116443, too). If
Thunderbird is to grow its user base, these should be reopened and fixed.
I believe there are other bugs that keep me from using Thunderbird as my
E-mail client. However, I don't choose to reread all 164 bug reports
that I'm tracking.
NO MORE MICROSOFT BUILT-IN-WINDOWS SOFTWARE!!! SUCK!!!