I don’t think the Vertical view works at all and even the Wide View which is probably the most usable of the three seems to just draw your attention to the header and not to the message itself. Note how there is virtually no working space in the Classic View to determine if the mail is one you want to allow images to be loaded. This stops the old-fashioned opaque pop ups that usually appear in the bottom right of the screen.Īs Ruben is clear to point out this is still experimental so all the usual rules apply and YMMV. You can then turn off Thunderbird’s internal notification tool as shown here. I had to install the Ubuntu package libnotify-bin to get the notifications working but that was easy: sudo apt-get install libnotify-bin. xpi package and then install it in the usual manner. Simply follow the very clear and easy instructions on his blog post to create the. Ruben Verweij has created a small Thunderbird extension that seems to fix this limitation. Since the new notification tool (9.04?) and then the Indicator Applet (9.10) were introduced however, Thunderbird hasn’t been able to avail itself of these useful tools. I’ve never really got on with Gnome‘s Evolution (the default mail client in Ubuntu) and so always install Thunderbird, Lightning and other great extensions for the Mozilla family of products on my Ubuntu desktops and laptops. Thunderbird Preferences This looks great!
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