The list of additions, changes and fixes look impressive! But I’m still worried about Thunderbird’s future and the planned rewrite. It’s a tough position to be in, (as if) attached at the hip to Firefox and to deal with the obsolescence of XUL extensions and other things that come part and parcel of using a good amount of code from Firefox.
I still believe it was a poor decision by Mozilla to cut off Thunderbird and float it as a community supported project. It now seems partially blessed by Mozilla, but isn’t how it was before that separation (AFAIK). The main thing I’ve felt as a huge missed opportunity with Thunderbird has been the lack of native Exchange calendar integration (no, none of the extensions, past and present, are close to even the experience of using Outlook web access for this purpose).
I’ll continue using Thunderbird for at least a few more years and will support the project financially, but I feel Outlook web access is slowly chipping away the need to use a desktop client in enterprise environments that are tied to Exchange or Office/Outlook 365.
I still believe it was a poor decision by Mozilla to cut off Thunderbird and float it as a community supported project. It now seems partially blessed by Mozilla, but isn’t how it was before that separation (AFAIK). The main thing I’ve felt as a huge missed opportunity with Thunderbird has been the lack of native Exchange calendar integration (no, none of the extensions, past and present, are close to even the experience of using Outlook web access for this purpose).
I’ll continue using Thunderbird for at least a few more years and will support the project financially, but I feel Outlook web access is slowly chipping away the need to use a desktop client in enterprise environments that are tied to Exchange or Office/Outlook 365.