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#1
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Email app again
Gmail upgraded itself. Newer version extremely slow on my XP system. It
offers no way to restore the previous version which I liked. I'm ready to change email apps. I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? I'm not going to use Eudora after it stopped working and demanded it be upgraded without offering and assistance. Any suggestions? Yet another email app? TIA -- I love a good meal! That's why I don't cook. |
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#2
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Email app again
In message , KenK
writes: Gmail upgraded itself. Newer version extremely slow on my XP system. It offers no way to restore the previous version which I liked. I'm ready to change email apps. You have an email client called gmail? I always understood gmail's default way of working was webmail, i. e. something you access using a web browser. I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? I would say you have: I think the current version of Thunderbird is around 60! (It isn't "Eudora OSE", is it? That was based on something like Thunderbird 2. [No, not the thing from the TV series ...]) I'm not going to use Eudora after it stopped working and demanded it be upgraded without offering and assistance. FWIW, my blind friends use Eudora (6 and 7 I think), and it seems to work fine on both Windows 7 and 10. Any suggestions? Yet another email app? TIA I usually set up new people with Thunderbird - it's not bad as an email (and news) client, and there are a good number of people around who can help with it. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Security is the perfect excuse to lock you out of your own computer. - Mayayana in alt.windows7.general, 2015-12-4 |
#3
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Email app again
On 1 Oct 2018 17:11:26 GMT, KenK wrote:
I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Can you right-click on "Local Folders" and choose "New Folder" from the right-click context menu? Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 definitely is old and obsolete. The latest Thunderbird which runs on XP is version 52.9.1. If you have XP SP3, you can download and install Thunderbird 52.9.1 from he https://archive.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbird/releases/52.9.1/win32/ On XP SP2 you must first install Thunderbird 38.5.0, and then use its built-in updater to update to version 52.9.1. See this link for details. https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/get-latest-version-thunderbird-windows-xp-vista -- Kind regards Ralph |
#4
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Email app again
Ralph Fox wrote in
: On 1 Oct 2018 17:11:26 GMT, KenK wrote: I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Can you right-click on "Local Folders" and choose "New Folder" from the right-click context menu? That looks like it will work. Will try iy soon. Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 definitely is old and obsolete. The latest Thunderbird which runs on XP is version 52.9.1. If you have XP SP3, you can download and install Thunderbird 52.9.1 from he https://archive.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbird/releases/52.9.1/win32/ On XP SP2 you must first install Thunderbird 38.5.0, and then use its built-in updater to update to version 52.9.1. See this link for details. https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb...thunderbird-wi ndows-xp-vista Before I upgrade I'll try that folder info you supplied. -- I love a good meal! That's why I don't cook. |
#5
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Email app again
KenK wrote:
Gmail upgraded itself. Newer version extremely slow on my XP system. It offers no way to restore the previous version which I liked. I'm ready to change email apps. Gmail is a service, not an app. So, what local e-mail client are you actually using on your Windows XP computer to access your Gmail account? Google does provide a webmail client but you must use a web browser to use that web interface to their service. A web browser is not an e-mail app. It is a client to connect to a site where you can see Google's webmail interface to their service. Is that what you're calling a "Gmail" e-mail app? E-mail providers may change their webmail interface at any time. Both Google and Microsoft have recently changed their webmail interfaces. https://www.imore.com/how-enable-new...-web-interface https://www.theverge.com/2018/3/14/1...esign-features I use Google's Voice service. They wanted to go to a new web interface but are extremely slow to migrate all functionality from their legacy UI to their new UI. They have an option to switch back to the legacy UI. That's not always a choice. With Outlook.com/Hotmail and Gmail, you got the new UI and that's all you get. No going back. Sometimes a service will roll out a new UI and let users test it for awhile where the users can switch between the old and new UIs. However, eventually they move to the new UI and there's no switching back. That is, there is an opt-out for awhile but eventually that goes away and you're forced to the new UI. I rarely use the webmail interface to my e-mail accounts. At some point, I noticed there was a new UI. I cannot say if there was an opt-out period that has since expired because I have been there very infrequently. I recall a beta phase for Outlook.com but now the only choice is their new UI. I use Gmail very little, so have even less reason to ever use their webmail interface. From the imore article, Google had an opt-out period, too. However, the article says there was an option to switch between old and new UIs but I don't see it. Guess the opt-out period has expired and everyone now gets the new UI. It is likely even more scripting is involved in the new webmail interface to Outlook.com and Gmail. If you are using an old OS with an old web browser on old hardware then it will take longer to process all those scripts. You might also try disabling any ad/content blocker extensions in your undentified web browser. Removing ads often speeds up a site but can sometimes slow down a site whose scripts expect that content, and adblockers can sometime block off-domain scripts that the page scripts expect to be accessible and callable. Adblockers will break the code of a web page. That's what they do. They block resources the page code expects to be available. You need to disable all extensions in whatever web browser you are using to see if the web page renders faster. Nothing you can do about using an old version of the web browser for which there are no newer versions available on the discontinued Windows XP platform and usually not much you can do to improve on the hardware without replacing it. I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? I haven't used Thunderbird for a long time. As I recall, you right-clicked on the parent folder under which you could create a new subfolder. If you wanted a main folder, you right-clicked on the root folder of a message store (aka account). Since you are using IMAP to access your Gmail account, you may have to right-click on the root folder and do an IMAP synchronization. It lets you choose which server-side IMAP folder to present in the local client. When you create new folders in the local client, they get created up on the server in your account. However, the client may not automatically add all folders defined on the server, so you have to go into the IMAP Folders context menu entry to select which server-side folders the local client will show. You get to the following dialog to have the client poll the server for a list of folders and then select which ones to which the client will synchronize: https://lwstatic-a.akamaihd.net/kb/w...ubfoldssub.png Folks in the Thunderbird newsgroup that currently use it might better guide you in how to synchronize or create folders in Thunderbird. They are over at mozilla.support.thunderbird (on the news.mozilla.org server on port 119). I'm not going to use Eudora after it stopped working and demanded it be upgraded without offering and assistance. Eudora died a long time ago. There was a Eudora OSE fork from Thunderbird but it died, too, back in 2013 (well, it got archived). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudora_(email_client) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudora_OSE |
#6
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Email app again
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , KenK writes: Gmail upgraded itself. Newer version extremely slow on my XP system. It offers no way to restore the previous version which I liked. I'm ready to change email apps. You have an email client called gmail? I always understood gmail's default way of working was webmail, i. e. something you access using a web browser. I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? I would say you have: I think the current version of Thunderbird is around 60! (It isn't "Eudora OSE", is it? That was based on something like Thunderbird 2. [No, not the thing from the TV series ...]) I'm not going to use Eudora after it stopped working and demanded it be upgraded without offering and assistance. FWIW, my blind friends use Eudora (6 and 7 I think), and it seems to work fine on both Windows 7 and 10. Any suggestions? Yet another email app? TIA I usually set up new people with Thunderbird - it's not bad as an email (and news) client, and there are a good number of people around who can help with it. Or alternatively, perhaps the special OEx version mentioned before (which works fine in Windows 7), or OE Classic. Given a choice of those 3 (including TB), I'd choose OE, but YMMV. :-) |
#7
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Email app again
On 01/10/2018 18:38, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
You have an email client called gmail? No he hasn't. GMAIL is not a client; It is a service. Don't misinform Microsoft Customers on these newsgroups; -- With over 950 million devices now running Windows 10, customer satisfaction is higher than any previous version of windows. |
#8
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Email app again
On 1 Oct 2018 17:11:26 GMT, KenK wrote:
Gmail upgraded itself. Newer version extremely slow on my XP system. It offers no way to restore the previous version which I liked. I'm ready to change email apps. I've got Thunderbird 2.0.0.24 which I use as a backup email app. I can't find a way to create new folders to hold emails I wish to save. Tried Googling this but can't get any help on this that works. Msybe I hsve an old obsolete T-Bird? It's the version I use. Make sure you downloaded it from the official repos: http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbi....0.0.24/win32/ and yes, it's very easy to avoid the mess webmail is and organize everything in folders. Don't forget you have to login to your gmail account, go to settings and allow POP and "insecure applications", as if gmail wasn't a trojan itself !!!! []'s -- Don't be evil - Google 2004 We have a new policy - Google 2012 |
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