![]() Free Password Previewing Tool version 2.3 (146 Kb).Posted by Chad Lundgren on Thursday, Decem(Link) After killing it, I uninstalled with extreme prejudice. Not only that, but when I pulled up my Task Manager, it was still running after I quit it. (It's possible, now that I think about it, that the menu was still there, just the arrow was missing, but I'm not going to use a program that flaky. That was the straw that broke the camel's back. Come on! I guess I wore it out from so much use. Mark was still there, but there was no arrow showing that it would expand out. The Mark submenu I use to mark spam had vanished. Rather irritated, I quit Thunderbird and got back into it. I gave Thunderbird the benefit of the doubt and thought maybe it somehow didn't get that these were spam, so I tried a promising-looking function that would delete mail marked as spam in the current folder: nada. ![]() I tried the Run Junk Mail Controls on Folder command: nothing. I checked the setting: it was indeed set to move spam to the Junk folder on marking. So I marked all 17 spam messages as spam, and they just sat there. I wasn't surprised that I might have to train Thunderbird spam filter, and sure enough, 17 spam emails landed in my inbox. Not something you should need to do for an allegedly 1.0 version.ģ. (Thunderbird uses this to keep track of all the menus and such.) What the heck, I did. Googling led to some information that said I should delete my XUL cache. Worse, Thunderbird randomly crashed three or four times on me for no apparent reason. But Mozilla Mail deals with it much more gracefully.ģ. Granted, I have a complicated setup: 3 accounts, one of them a secure connection, and all using IMAP. Thunderbird would often show the hourglass wait icon, sometimes for reasons that still elude me. If it only did it once in a while, that would be one thing, but this seems to be intended, and happens all the time. Thunderbird has an irritating habit of blanking out the pane that displays the message information (subject, sender, etc). My first impression about Thunderbird 1.0 was good: it imported my mail folders, address book, even mail filters. I tried switching again with the release of Thunderbird 1.0. I would like to use Mozilla Thunderbird to read my email, since Mozilla Mail only opens links in Mozilla, and I'm happy with Firefox. The interesting thing is that this type of knowlegable users is the ones that likely will influence decisions on IT strategy for their company (Computer Sweden readers) or for their familly at home (DatorMagazin).Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0: STILL not ready for prime time It provides business oriented information on development and trends in the computer industry.Ī subscription is rather pricy, so its not likely to be read by 13 year old computer geeks, but rather by CIOs, consultants and such.Ī more technically oriented Swedish magazin (DatorMagazin) claimed a while ago that about half of their visits was by mozillabased browsers. In todays issue of Computer Sweden they claimed that 24% of their website visits was by firefox, 68% IE.Ĭomputer Sweden is a tabloid format newspaper with 3 issus/week. People interested in old games are more likely to be technologically oriented, and therefore more likely to use Firefox. > After seeing this, it makes me question the stats because the is based on an old WINDOWS ONLY game.
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