Thanks tb team for your work! I love you all!
Anyhow, Gnus can render "html" articles; `mm-text-heml-renderer' defaults to the built-in `shr' in Emacs 24.
Have you tried Sylpheed? https://sylpheed.sraoss.jp/en/
That is so far from the truth it isn’t even funny. Outlook reigns in corporate and phones have native clients. Hell, i am still waiting for POP3 to die.
How well does it work today? Does the mail client have the ability to sign up for RSS/Atom feeds? Does it have a calendar built in? What about chat? (I guess I'm one of the rare Thunderbird users who actually uses all of those features).
That said, I also feel it is one of the worst calendar clients around. I've used lightning, I've tried the calendar plugins for google, things just don't work.
I hope they focus on performance in coming revisions.
Hell, you can search the entirety of the public internet in a fraction of a second, but a few hundred thousand emails locks up your machine for the better part of a minute? Maybe the Rust folks working on parallelism can spend a few sprints giving TB some love.
Still very old to be in such widespread use, though. From where I worked to my grandma to my in-laws to the Linux poweruser that I am, a very widespread range of people use it. I am not 100% happy with it, but email is important enough that I want something stable (e.g. no bugs that either mess up my email server-side or stop it from working) and secure (both the connection and for viewing).
Don't forget to donate.
Seems like Mozilla could be a trustworthy mail provider as well.
Thunderbird was a good mail client, but the search is seriously broken. It's almost impossible to search Chinese at all, and when it searches Russian, some weird hits get mixed in, and some proper hits get ignored.
Postbox was very good overall, but every once in a while it would lose the whole cache, index, and sometimes even the whole downloaded history, and would spend a day chugging at downloading everything over again.
So for the last half a year I've been using Spark, and I'm pleasantly surprised by speed, search, and the feel of the app. Admittedly, there is no Windows version so it's not truly cross-platform.
It doubles the size of your maildir with the indexing, which is a downside if you're crunched for space, but maybe that gives you an idea for just how much is indexed and how fast you can expect searching to be.
It's fair to say that the most popular interface for it is the emacs interface, which is great if you're already using emacs for mail because your workflow won't change substantially. There are other interfaces available, I have used one called alot [3] and find it to be very good as well.
I’ve written an emacs function which opens the mail in firefox, but I’m not really fond of that as every remote content is loaded by the browser. Is there a way to stop that?
See. https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/mu-discuss/JqHEGycEy...
If you have any suggestions regarding this I'd love to hear it.
There are kids enlisting in the army now that were born after XP was released.
The operating system support doesn't change within a major release, which is why 52.7 has the same operating system support as 52.0.
Does the army accept 16-year-olds?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_XP
"It was released to manufacturing on August 24, 2001, and broadly released for retail sale on October 25, 2001."