Mozilla Organization - ( Open Source)
Thunderbird is a powerful email client that allows to manage multiple accounts using a single interface.
Mozilla Thunderbird is a sophisticated open-source e-mail client. It is lightweight, extremely fast, easy to use and offers many advantages comparing to competing programs.
Mozilla Thunderbird consolidates its support for the Twitter API and for a similar display.
It easily connect to POP3 and IMAP accounts and offers an accessible interface with preview panel and tab (thereby facilitating reading e-mails).
Highly configurable, Thunderbird offers the user the possibility to customize the toolbar, add functionality through extensions and apply themes according to his tastes.
Thunderbird innovates and sees integrate instant messaging features. The user can indeed connect their Twitter accounts, Facebook, Google Talk, connect to IRC networks as well as moved by the XMPP protocol.
ThunderBird allows to manage multiple accounts making it possible to use different accounts with a single interface.
Apart from the use of multiple accounts, this tool offers security by encrypting the mail as it includes an optional encryption tool mails.
To enhance the security of the mail, Thunderbird has a tool that can automatically detect spam. To do this, the software automatically moves the undesirable letters and places them in another folder.
# New
- New tab-based Preferences
- Share the active tab or window in a Hello conversation - enabled for first half of the beta cycle
- Keep track of articles and blog posts with the Reading List - enabled for the first half of the beta cycle
- Ruby annotation support
- Base for the next ESR release.
# Changed
- autocomplete=off is no longer supported for username/password fields
- URL parser avoids doing percent encoding when setting the Fragment part of the URL, and percent decoding when getting the Fragment in line with the URL spec
- RegExp.prototype.source now returns "(?:)" instead of the empty string for empty regular expressions
- Page load times improved by speculative connection warmup
# HTML5
- WebSocket now available in Web Workers
- Implemented srcset attribute and <picture> element for responsive images
- Implemented DOM3 Events KeyboardEvent.code
- BroadcastChannel API implemented (more at hacks.mozilla.org)
- Mac OS X: Implemented a subset of the Media Source Extensions (MSE) API to allow native HTML5 playback on YouTube
- Implemented Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) API to support encrypted HTML5 video/audio playback
- Automatically download Adobe Primetime Content Decryption Module (CDM) for DRM playback through EME
# Developer
- Optimized-out variables are now visible in Debugger UI
- XMLHttpRequest logs in the web console are now visually labelled and can be filtered separately from regular network requests
- copy command added to console
- WebRTC now has multistream and renegotiation support