Forum Moderators: phranque
The advice is not only for Outlook. I hate to admit but I am tired to learn how to use the tricks of another email client although I am not a fan of Outlook.
Is there another email client with the incredible search capabilities of Gmail (or presumably M2, which I haven't tried) that operates as a stand-alone email client? How good is Thunderbird's search function? As fast as Gmail's? Better than Outlook's? I can't imagine anything being WORSE than outlook's search...
Since starting this thread I've had a go with yahoo mail. It's not bad, but one of the main problems is speed of browsing lots of new mails - you have to open each one and load in a new page to view it. Gmail is better in that regard.
Also, I've got quite used to spam bully on outlook which does a fairly good job of removing stuff. So far the yahoo account hasn't spotted one spam mail (I get hundreds a day)
Next I'm going to give thunderbird a go. Anyone know of a spam bully equivalent for thunderbird?
T-bird has a good spam/junk filter and you can educate it...and instruct it to simplt dump it in a folder.
I check my folder every hour or so because I still find some of my clients' emails are deemed junk. I can live with that.
This transfer from Outlook to Moz is easy and it keeps your address book etc.
I love it!
The points I find in favor of Outlook are that you can handle multiple accounts quite easily, it's simple to export your messages, appointments, and contacts to pretty much any other program if necessary, and it keeps all your data in a single file - meaning recovery can be much simpler in the event of a crash. If you use common sense about which messages to open, when to use (and not use) the preview pane, and use the best-practice principles about unexpected attachments, Outlook can also be quite secure.
I use ThunderBird as well, but after using it exclusively for a month I still couldn't get used to it for my primary e-mail client. (And I don't know why, either - it has a lot of good features that Outlook doesn't offer. It just seemed clumsy to me.)
Not to be an evangelist, but why not? It's faster than Firefox, has more features, and you can skin it to look exactly the same.Ctrl+Alt+L and Ctrl+G are the two most useful SEO tools ever invented.
I say:
The ads. I don't want to pay for a browser, and I don't like ads.
Those two keyboard shortcuts are neat, but for my purposes the web developer toolbar accomplishes both satisfactorily. Admittedly, Opera does make it easier to look at all links on a page. But that's not something I need to do very often.