The e-mail client is one of Thunderbird Portable's most useful features - you can take your e-mail with you wherever you go although obviously, you can quickly fill up a flash drive with e-mails as you download them.Fortunately, Thunderbird Portable itself only takes 30-40MB of space. In terms of performance, there are few noticeable differences between Thunderbird Portable and it's big brother.It's really easy to install although we found synchronization with the mail exchange could sometimes be troublesome. The only major worry you might have is misplacing the USB drive if it's got most of your e-mails on.If there was some way to protect users from this kind of accident, then Thunderbird Portable would be the perfect portable app. If you can't bear to be without your email client when on the move, Thunderbird Portable is the perfect solution, allowing you to use it on any PC you choose.
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POP3. If Thunderbird keeps downloading the same messages for a POP account the popstate.dat file may be corrupted. Thats a file in the profile folder that keeps track of what messages have been downloaded from that POP3 server.
IMAP. If you are using IMAP, there have been reports that Thunderbird may repeatedly attempt to download the same messages if its copy of the folder has reached the file size limit for your file system. FAT32, for example, has a file size limit of 4GB. If you are storing messages on a file system that has such a limit, and are seeing excessive network traffic when Thunderbird is open, or repeated download attempts of the same messages, then you may want to check the size of the files in the ImapMail subfolder in your profile folder. If the file representing a folder has reached the filesystem limit, some potential solutions in order of complexity and risk are: (a) compact the folder in Thunderbird; (b) move old messages into another folder; or (c) delete the folder's file in your profile folder, and Thunderbird will re-download the messages when it is restarted; (d) move the profile to another disk on your computer that has a filesystem with a larger file limit; or (e) converting the disk with the profile to a more modern filesystem with a larger file size limit.
4. By default, any downloads will go to your "Downloads" folder. If you are given a choice where to download Thunderbird to, choose you Downloads folder, and then click Save.
Some especaially bad fallout from this behavior - a beta user got this notice and the download URL presented was our main page, NOT the beta download page. So he installed the release version and ended up breifly "losing" his profile because he got downgraded, without notice -
My installation detected that version 68.3.0 is available but from there it went downhill.Tried the auto-update, that updated to version 68.3.0, and lo and behold it reports its version 68.3.0, but at the end it said restart to update Thunderbird. Do that, Thunderbird restarts and reports that its version 68.2.2 again and you need to restart to update Thunderbird.So Reboot the OS and run Thunderbird still saying 68.2.2.Close Thunderbird download from the Thunderbird site and install, 68.3.0 but still with the restart... message.
If data privacy matters to you, Thunderbird is the download you want. Opt for Microsoft Outlook or Gmail if data privacy is not a priority and your licensing budget is sufficient to upgrade to an Outlook subscription. Data is more private, operational speed impressive, and features abound, making Mozilla Thunderbird an excellent email client choice.
There may be some kind of bug. However, I would check the settings under tools>account settings. Look under server settings for the email in question. There are 3 options for when to download (at startup, at specified interval, and allow immediate notification). If you uncheck all of them TB should never check with the server.
Thunderbird is available as an AppImage which means "one app = one file", which you can download and run on your Linux system while you don't need a package manager and nothing gets changed in your system. Awesome!
The Thunderbird AppImage also can be updated using AppImageUpdate. Using this tool, Thunderbird can be updated by downloading only the portions of the AppImage that have actually changed since the last version. 2ff7e9595c
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