A very interesting video about the Thunderbird Project successful donation process and how KDE can improve them by following their step.

  • dust_accelerator@discuss.tchncs.de
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    edit-2
    1 year ago

    It's my daily driver. It has incredible compatibility and very nice features, for example the rule based filter actions, header matching, which immensely boosts my workflow efficiency. Not to mention the calendars and tasks integration and the great extensibility via the plugin system.

    Thunderbird is a great example of community driven awesomeness.

    • SwitchyWitchyandBitchy [she/her]
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      1 year ago

      Is there a way to easily search messages based on sender, recipient, etc? I found it annoying that I can’t just type from:jane.doe@example.com and see all messages from her. I remember there was a way but it seemed unnecessarily difficult to access.

  • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Hopefully they'll build in support for disroot, fastmail, posteo, protonmail, tutanota, and other opensource encrypted mail agends that don't provide a bridge.

    Edit: so the summary of the video is "marketing". Linux, KDE, and opensource projects in general need way better marketing. If Linux could rebrand itself as anything but "the geek thing", I bet it would be much more successful.

    • nevial@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      I'm curious what you mean by that. What exactly do you miss for these providers? (e.g. for posteo and mailbox.org, as those are the ones I am using)

      • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Encrypted mail providers should require a bridge in order to be able to pull or send emails with. Protonmail has "Proton Bridge", tutanota has nothing. I see now that disroot, fastmail and posteo have direct SMTP access 🤔 That leads me to question: what actually is encrypted? Direct SMTP and IMAP access probably means they can read your mail.

        • nevial@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          There is encryption at rest (storage encryption), transport encryption and end-to-end encryption. E.g. Posteo has transport encryption and optional storage encryption. With activated storage encryption, Posteo cannot read your mail because the encryption key on their server is only usable with your password (which they do not store). Proton Bridge adds end-to-end encryption to Protonmail

    • CafecitoHippo@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I think a lot of the issue with mainstream adoption to Linux is the software suite and not the operating system. I refused to switch to Linux because of needing MS Office (specifically Excel). I needed it for work at my previous job until they provided everyone with laptops during the pandemic. And before you say just use LibreOffice or OnlyOffice, they are fine options for personal use for me. But for my productivity, switching between the two with different shortcuts was miserable. LibreOffice still pisses me off for formula auto completion. If I hit tab while making a formula, I want to go to the next parameter in the formula not the next cell.

      • Chump [he/him]
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        1 year ago

        Excel does always seem to be the thing people can’t substitute, which is weird because it doesn’t seem terribly more complicated than Word (?)

        • CafecitoHippo@lemm.ee
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          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Excel is vastly more complicated than Word. Word is just basic word processing. Excel has lots of data manipulation, formulas, tables, charts, plus when coupled with visual basic, scripts and macros. I could do all that stuff in LibreOffice if I only worked in LibreOffice. But having to work in Excel at the office and LibreOffice at home would've been a NIGHTMARE.