Great Question, @garydale! I’ve been meaning to ask about this myself. As a Web developer, over time I grew to openly detest Microsoft for their business tactics. From their very first product, MS-DOS (acquired as QDOS, AKA Quick and Dirty Operating System) forward, they have been the innovator of roughly ZERO products. They buy products someone else has invented, and do a bit to modify them or sometimes nothing at all more than renaming and rebranding them. Instead, they invest heavily in FUD engineering. That is, they generate Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt about the competitor’s products, some of which were actually technically superior to the one Microsoft had chosen at the time. Their basic marketing strategy is, “Buy our product, or explode!” The corporate world responds like Pavlov’s dog to FUD. And with corporate sales locked up for each new product, Microsoft had the advertising dollars and perceived market dominance to destroy any competitor who refused to
To escape Microsoft’s FUD Hell, I adopted the Eudora Pro(e-mail_client) Email Client from Qualcom in early 2003 rather than lock myself in to Microsoft’s Outlook or Outlook Express (for the home user). My main reason aside from simple disgust at Microsoft’s thuggish business practices was that hackers were targeting Outlook. I had a router with strong encryption, but why adopt the software every hacker on Earth was targeting? So I’ve beem using Eudora since it was developed. I was devastated in 2006 when I heard from Qualcom that they were ending development on Eudora. By that time, I have a huge investment in email filing system to run my Web development business.
So rather than risk havoc in moving all my Eudora messages and categories to Outlook, I hung in there to see what would happen next. Naturally, I was thrilled at the announcement of the Thunderbird Open Source project being managed by Mozilla, I was totally on board.
I’ve been using the latest release as each new realase number hitsd the street. Here are the things that are either missing, or that I don’t yet see a way to do in the new product. I can’t create a Sig file, I have instead been opening a separare copy of my old Eudora and copying my Sig file from it onto the bottom of each new wmils
Also, the new Eudora doesn’;t seem to provide any way to generate stationery. In old Eudora, you could write boilerplate file and simply fill in the addresse/s, bubject line, etc. The bulk of the enail is already written, and just needs the details like addressee, subject, etc. Again, I am copying the stationery from the existing
If there are solutions to these problems that some of you are familiar with—ways that the New Eudore OSE supports—please post them.