![]() ![]() 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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