Thunderbird

Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Brought to you by: James

Last Update: 3/4/2006

Well, for those of you who are interested, here’s my take on the Mozilla Foundation’s current, major projects.

The Mozilla Foundation is a non-profit and open-source organization that develops Mozilla and all of its related apps.

Firefox: Firefox Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Firefox features the Gecko rendering engine and is very similar to Safari when comparing standard features. Out of the box, you’ll notice tabs, pop-up blocking, and a search field. After digging deeper, you’ll notice settings that are very similar to Safari’s. Of particular notice, Firefox’s ability to clear all privacy settings makes it the best browser for the work place, but don’t tell your boss that I said that.

Pros: Firefox is easily expandable and has a large and fast-growing user base (mostly IE refugees). Firefox is a cross-platform browser for Mac, Windows, and Linux.

Cons: None significant.

Rating: blue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Camino: Camino Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Camino is a Mac-only browser from the Mozilla Foundation. Camino features the same Gecko rendering engine as Firefox and is built with Cocoa. It’s fast and surprisingly stable. Camino’s key features are tabs, pop-up blocking, an Aqua user interface, and a search field. Camino was originally the default browser for most of the Mac community until Safari’s release. Ironically, Camino contributed to a few of the features that we see in Safari (specifically, tabs).

Pros: Camino features the power of the Gecko rendering engine and “looks and feels like a Mac OS X application should because it was designed exclusively for Mac OS X and the high standards set by its users.”

Cons: None significant.

Rating: blue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Thunderbird: Thunderbird Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Thunderbird is basically an off-shoot of Mozilla’s original email core and it is beautiful in both look and feel. It runs smoothly and has a very familiar feel. In fact, it’s amazingly similar to Outlook Express. Thunderbird has a spam detection system which is very similar to Mail.app and just as effective, an integrates RSS reader, and also supports GPG encryption. See Secure Your Email for details.

Pros: Thunderbird is easily expandable and has a large and fast-growing user base (mostly Outlook Express refugees). Thunderbird is a cross-platform email application for Mac, Windows, and Linux.

Cons: None significant.

Rating: blue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projectsblue Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

Mozilla Add-ons:

Mozilla Add-ons is the official Extension and Theme source for Firefox and Thunderbird.

MozDev:

MozDev is not part of the Mozilla Foundation and entirely independent, though you can consider it as the original developer community. MozDev is a community dedicated to expanding Mozilla and building applications that are based on similar code. I highly suggest that you stop by and take a look.

Nightly Builds:

All of the above apps have was the Mozilla community calls “Nightly Builds”. These are new versions of the app released each night. The new versions contain bug fixes and the occasional new feature.

Well, I hope you enjoyed my little walk-through of the current state of the Mozilla Foundation’s major projects. Have a nice day!

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camino190 Current Mozilla Foundation Projects

FreeZilla

It’s time we took note of the fruits of the Mozilla project. There’s much more than Mozilla…

FireFox

Now at version 0.9, this fast and flexible browser could be the best one out there. This new version features a theme manager and extension manager. The Mac theme is pretty slick too.

FireFox supports a collection of easily-installed extensions. Among the must haves are Google Bar and Sage. With these you can bring the Google toolbar to your Mac and view your RSS headlines in your browser. There are a ton more, here and here.

Thunderbird

This Mozilla email app sports a smart spam filter, extension support and more. Thunderbird also supports themes.

Camino

This pure cocoa browser is the Mac-only member of the Mozzila family. It is fast and includes features like integrated Google search, tabs and pop-up blocking like FireFox.

Now you have all kinds of choices, so unleash the ‘Zilla

Brian

Email After Entourage

Here at MacMerc we love alternatives to Microsoft Office. Entourage is no exception. With 2004 on the shelves, the stakes are high. I think you’ll agree, I have a nice, and free alternative.

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For this week’s Freeloader special feature we’ll toss Mozilla Thunderbird up against arguably the best Mac PIM.

This isn’t entirely fair to Thunderbird, which is only at version 0.8 and lacks the polish if its older brother Firefox. But, all the same, the feature match up is impressive.

Mail Features

Both contenders support POP, IMAP and SMTP servers with advanced settings. Thunderbird tosses in easy-to-use return receipt configuration and simplifies swapping SMTP servers. Both feature spam filtering, though Thunderbird’s is trainable. and Entourage’s is not.

PIM Features

You’re right, Thunderbird isn’t a PIM, or is it? With the Mozilla Calendar extension, Thunderbird sports a calendar which uses the iCal standard. Unlike Entourage’s proprietary format, Mozilla Calendar can be synced to remote servers and shared with iCal.

Extras

Entourage brags a project manager, but Thunderbird takes information integration a step further with a built-in RSS reader. RSS updates make sense in an email client.

Migration

Convinced? Making the move isn’t as bad as you think. Entourage addresses exported to a text file are easily imported (though matching the fields is a bit of a pain). Moving mail isn’t too bad either. Dragging Entourage folders to the desktop gives you MBOX files you can drop right into the Mail folder of your Thunderbird profile.

The Future

For the rest of you not quite ready for beta quality software, don’t write Thunderbird off. With the support of the Mozilla Foundation and enormous potential in its support for third party extensions, you will be hearing about Thunderbird again.

Join me next week for another look at the web’s best freeware!

Brian