May 18, 2008 12:00 AM PDT

Featured Freeware: Thunderbird

Mozilla's Thunderbird has come into its own with version 2 for Windows, Mac, and in a portable edition. Starring features and innovations that take aim at both Web e-mail clients and industry standards such as Microsoft's Outlook, open-source Thunderbird offers the best of both worlds.

Back and forward buttons, like the ones you have in your Web browser, let you jump through messages in the order that you viewed them. Keep your e-mails organized with tags, even across dozens of message folders. Configuration is as simple as entering your e-mail address and password. Search results can be saved, and Thunderbird has Firefox's extension capability, allowing for user-designed tweaks that greatly enhance the program, including Lightning, which provides calendaring features.

Even when weighed down by multiple folders and RSS feeds, the program loads fast, and the basic feature set remains intact: good junk mail filters, HTML support, multiple identities, and POP, IMAP, and Microsoft Exchange server support. Security features include S/MIME, digital signing, message encryption, and a built-in phishing detector. Flexible, powerful, and lightweight, Thunderbird 2 is an appropriate companion application to Firefox in every way.

Recent posts from The Daily Download
Spyware Horror Story: Once is enough
Security patch for Thunderbird
PageOnce iPhone app organizes your bills, life
Zimbra Desktop gives Yahoo Mail offline access
Featured Freeware: Kruptos 2
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 5 comments (Page 1 of 1)
by 0zSpit May 18, 2008 4:24 AM PDT
why feature things that have been around a while. people try this out then go back to their regular e-mail accounts. this doesn't really sync with your e-mail client, if you delete something them go to the actual e-mail site it's still there. you should feature things you've tested and gave a real inspection instead of pushing off the same old garbage your sponsors are hocking, with the same old review it had years earlier. plus if you have firefox they have extensions that do this exact same thing. nothing worse than junking up your computer with unneeded software.
Reply to this comment
by Kat1110 May 18, 2008 5:52 AM PDT
I've been using Thunderbird on an old laptop for about 4 months to try it out (I had been using AOL on my desktop for several years) and I've grown to love it. I hate using webmail and after AOL mysteriously crashed and refused to open for the umpteenth time, I had no qualms about uninstalling AOL (which is an ongoing exercise, to be sure!) and installing and using Thunderbird on my desktop. That has been a little over 2 months now and I'm still without regret over the move. I had given OE a try a couple of times on both the laptop and desktop but it never went smoothly, so with the constant security threats that arise (with OE), Thunderbird was a no-brainer as my chosen option. It's obvious to me that the previous commenter either never really gave Thunderbird a try (nor am I sure he even has used FF either, with that extension comment) or he's extremely cranky due to the hour he was making his comment....

I'm awaiting the delivery of my new laptop and I will be installing Thunderbird at my first opportunity. But don't try it (or not) because I like it or because the previous writer doesn't, try it because it has been given universally good reviews for everything from it's own add-on extensions to it's ease of use. With it's open source contributions it also, like FF, has a quick response to security issues... waiting for the monthly security updates from MS only to find that an issue has not been resolved yet is not only nerve-wracking and frustrating, it puts your computers at risk.
Reply to this comment
by lifeguardguy May 18, 2008 10:39 AM PDT
I've been using Thunderbird for a couple years now and it syncs perfectly with Google's Gmail. You can choose to delete your mail automatically from the web based e-mail once it forwards to Thunderbird. It's quick, easier to use than Outlook, and you can customize it! This is a great e-mail program! Try it and see for yourself!
Reply to this comment View reply
by Malicity May 19, 2008 12:18 AM PDT
If you could explain how, I'd greatly appreciate it. Looked around a bit, but there's no hard and fast answer except going through all this crap about making an external IMAP account...
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
Add this to your feed reader
RSS feed
Add to Google
Add to Yahoo
Add to MSN
Add to Bloglines
Add to Newsgator
Recent posts
Spyware Horror Story: Once is enough
Security patch for Thunderbird
PageOnce iPhone app organizes your bills, life
Zimbra Desktop gives Yahoo Mail offline access
Featured Freeware: Kruptos 2
Download bloggers
Peter Butler
Jessica Dolcourt
Jason Parker
Seth Rosenblatt
Mark Sikes
About the Download Blog

Download.com editors cover the world of downloadable software and beyond.

On MovieTome: SEX AND THE CITY clips are here!
Visit other CBS Interactive sites