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    Mozilla Takes Aim at E-mail with Thunderbird 1.0

    Written by

    Jim Louderback
    Published December 7, 2004
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      Full Review

      Based on our initial impressions, the new open-source e-mail client from Mozilla, called Thunderbird, is well worth exploring. It seems to work quite well, both on Web-based mail like Gmail and on POP3 accounts. It also supports IMAP for connecting to Exchange and other servers, but we didnt test that feature.

      Outlook Express users should have no problem understanding and using Thunderbird. It works in much the same way as Outlook, with buttons on the top to get mail, a preview pane to read messages quickly, and an easy way to compose and respond to e-mail.

      Setup was easy. We simply downloaded the application from the Mozilla site. The program walked us through setting up a connection to a POP account, and we also quickly connected Thunderbird to Gmail using instructions on Googles site.

      Thunderbird adds a number of new features that could make it superior to Outlook Express. Our favorite is the ability to integrate RSS feeds into the e-mail client. During testing, we added feeds from PCMag.com and our sister sites eWEEK.com and Microsoft-Watch.com. The mechanism for adding feeds is rudimentary—there are no predefined feeds, and the e-mail client will not auto-discover feeds from a Web page. Once you subscribe, however, Thunderbird makes it simple to view those feeds.

      The feed display console is identical to the e-mail display. Feed entry headlines are displayed on top, and the preview window displays either the entire Web page or a summary of the feed. This makes it easy to browse through multiple feeds and keep up with blogs and other news services.

      You can also select from one of three different preview panes. The default view puts your folders on the left side, message list on top, and preview underneath. A wide view extends the preview window to the full width of the screen, while the vertical view puts the folders, message list, and preview into separate vertical columns. Unfortunately, view settings are global—you cant, for example, use the standard view for e-mail and the wide view for RSS feeds.

      Making Mail

      Thunderbird also surpasses Outlook Express with its e-mail creation capabilities, at least on preliminary tests. It supports a wide range of HTML-style e-mail constructs, including tables, named anchors, and even a table of contents. It also provides more powerful image tools than those found in Outlook Express. Images can be easily resized and placed anywhere in the message. Like Outlook Express, Thunderbird includes basic text formatting and a spell-check feature.

      The Mozilla-bred e-mail client also includes what appears to be more advanced inbound-message processing. It includes a junk e-mail filter that can automatically flag messages it thinks are spam, with the option of automatically moving or deleting them. It didnt work very well at first, but the program can also be taught whats junk and what isnt. Thunderbird also includes a basic rule-processing capability—we found it equivalent to whats in Outlook Express, though with a somewhat different interface.

      Mozilla has also made Thunderbird natively extensible—both in terms of functionality and look and feel. Although only nine Thunderbird extensions are available today, more are likely to be released over time. The current list of extensions includes the ability to control your music player from within Thunderbird and a nifty way to use mouse gestures, instead of the keyboard, to read e-mail. Thunderbirds look can also be changed through downloadable skins. We couldnt test this feature, however, because the skins available on Mozillas Web site havent been updated from the beta, and therefore would not work with Version 1.0.

      All in all, Thunderbird seems like a better e-mail client than Outlook Express. If you use POP or Web e-mail, give it a try. Chances are, you wont go back.

      Jim Louderback
      Jim Louderback
      With more than 20 years experience in consulting, technology, computers and media, Jim Louderback has pioneered many significant new innovations.While building computer systems for Fortune 100 companies in the '80s, Jim developed innovative client-server computing models, implementing some of the first successful LAN-based client-server systems. He also created a highly successful iterative development methodology uniquely suited to this new systems architecture.As Lab Director at PC Week, Jim developed and refined the product review as an essential news story. He expanded the lab to California, and created significant competitive advantage for the leading IT weekly.When he became editor-in-chief of Windows Sources in 1995, he inherited a magazine teetering on the brink of failure. In six short months, he turned the publication into a money-maker, by refocusing it entirely on the new Windows 95. Newsstand sales tripled, and his magazine won industry awards for excellence of design and content.In 1997, Jim launched TechTV's content, creating and nurturing a highly successful mix of help, product information, news and entertainment. He appeared in numerous segments on the network, and hosted the enormously popular Fresh Gear show for three years.In 1999, he developed the 'Best of CES' awards program in partnership with CEA, the parent company of the CES trade show. This innovative program, where new products were judged directly on the trade show floor, was a resounding success, and continues today.In 2000, Jim began developing, a daily, live, 8 hour TechTV news program called TechLive. Called 'the CNBC of Technology,' TechLive delivered a daily day-long dose of market news, product information, technology reporting and CEO interviews. After its highly successful launch in April of 2001, Jim managed the entire organization, along with setting editorial direction for the balance of TechTV.In the summer or 2002, Jim joined Ziff Davis Media to be Editor-In-Chief and Vice President of Media Properties, including ExtremeTech.com, Microsoft Watch, and the websites for PC Magazine, eWeek and ZDM's gaming publications.

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