![]() ![]() I've got my main phone always with me, but the setup would be the same. Not my one.Īnd I don't need mail on tablets and my old phone. I can easily figure jobs that need constant access to the complete email archive. I never did before 2011 (first Android phone) and nothing changed after then. ![]() My 35 years experience with email: I don't need to read old messages when I'm not at my computer. I check mail on my phone with K9 (configured to leave messages on server,) possibly answer BCCing myself and eventually download mail forever on my laptop and remove from server. I have absolutely zero interest in playing the 'what spurious UI change will throw my staff into confusion today' game with a basic productivity tool. My staff need imap and calendaring and consistency. That was the update that pushed me over the edge and prompted the rollback and push of whatever 60-ish version I chose. The last update made the context-menus and dropdown-menus white backgrounded menus with literally no border, so you had no way to determine where the menu background ended and the email background started. They're intending to jumpstart a chat protocol with a client that's used by like 0.8% of users? Sure. Now Thunderbird has added chat, that's great. Firefox added chat, everybody disabled it and eventually the feature was removed. ![]() Firefox added pocket, everyone disabled it and eventually the feature was removed. It seems they're repeating all the mistakes that firefox made. I rely on Thunderbird every single day, which is why I froze it at version 60-something (rolling back about four years) after the upgrades kept breaking it and mangling the appearance for me and the other people in my company. ![]()
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