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Prepping my new Thunderbird

Sunday December 13, 2009

1956 Ford Thunderbird

On Wednesday, I took delivery of my new 3.0 Thunderbird. The classic lines I’ve grown accustomed to were still there, just a new engine underneath.

A quick spin around the neighborhood revealed the new archiving and search enhancements, prompting me to bring in all of my mail from the Google cloud.

My Gmail accounts ranged from being strictly web based, to living as POP accounts from time of creation. Web only accounts required the steps below plus a simple sort, purge and archive process, the POP accounts just needed archiving.

  1. Sign into each Gmail account, go to Settings, then the Forwarding and POP/IMAP tab.
  2. Turn on Enable POP for all mail (even mail that’s already been downloaded) and press Save Changes.
  3. Thunderbird’s Add Mail Account wizard helps you setup up your Gmail based accounts, just switch the default of IMAP to POP access.
  4. The newly created accounts connect to Google and begin downloading the Inbox and Sent Mail boxes, 200 to 300 messages per request.
  5. Set Check for new messages to 5 minutes and leave it idling.

Notes:

  • Some accounts, ones that were web based then became pop based or were pop based and later dropped from the rotation, well they required a remove duplicates extension.
  • The Archive button seemed a bit jumpy, so I sorted the messages by date and then selected them one year at a time before archiving them.
  • With all the importing of messages and moving them around, the new search table grew to 169 megabytes. I swept away global-messages-db.sqlite from my profile and Thunderbird recreated it consuming only 26 megabytes.

IMAP is a wonderful method to keep the web based interface in sync with any device, but I use Gmail as a web archive. I don’t want local changes to affect my lifetime goal of reaching my storage quota.

Put on my CompactHeader add-on and took the Tbird out on the open road.

got Electric Windows
tilt Away Wheel
slide Across The Bucket Seat
for That Sexy Leather Feel

Thunderbird 3.0

Wednesday December 9, 2009

Mozilla Messaging releases its free and open source email application.

Mozilla Thunderbird

Following it’s progress on the mozillaZine forums, I eagerly waited for the release of Thunderbird 3.0. Being a long time user of email clients that share their lineage with Netscape Mail, my many years of email messages would be a great test for the new search features. With 3 alphas, 4 betas and 3 release candidates, the final release of 3.0 landed on 12/08.

Backed up my profile this morning, uninstalled 2.0.0.23 and installed the 3.0 final release. When 3.0 first booted up, it displayed 3 tabs, my Inbox, the Migration Assistant and the What’s New in Thunderbird tabs. The status bar showed the progress of indexing my messages for the new search feature.

The only thing left to do was install the latest nightly of Lightning for my calendaring needs. Dragged and dropped the xpi on the addons dialogue and 1.0b1pre installed and on restart opened up it’s own tab in Thunderbird.

Using the search brought back memories of days gone by, projects I’ve worked on, correspondence from friends and family, all opened up in a neatly displayed tab of results. For now, I’ll keep everything as it defaulted, with the new toolbar and smart folders, though different than what I’m accustomed to, it does appear to have it’s productivity benefits.

My Thunderbird, my Thunderbird
She’s the voice of the future
Baby, have you heard
Tomorrow’s taken wing on my Thunderbird

Gateway NV5435U

Monday December 7, 2009

With YouTube and Hulu viewing far outpacing TV viewing in our household, an old Sony VAIO we’ve had for many years wasn’t providing an acceptable Adobe Flash experience.

Gateway NV5435U

We welcome the newest member of our computer family, the Gateway NV5435U, affectionately dubbed the portable cinema. With a dual core processor and 4 gigabytes of ram, it should provide us with many years of great performance. The 6-Cell battery lasts over 3.5 hours and the built in webcam is a plus for carrying on video conferencing in Skype.

The new laptop is an early Christmas present for my Hulu viewing spouse. Her old laptop was handed down to our eldest son, who’s happily watching episodes of his favorite vintage shows on YouTube. Which makes me contemplate, why do we need cable?

Norma Jean has gone with the wind
And we’ll never, never see her no more
Jimmy Dean you drove that machine
Chased a dream, chased a dream

Firefox 3.6

Thursday December 3, 2009

Namoroka is now my primary browser.

Firefox Namoroka

For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been testing the betas using the portable version of Firefox. Today, I decided it was time to take the plunge and upgrade 3.5 with Beta 4 of Firefox 3.6.

What’s not to like about Namoroka, it’s faster and incorporates new CSS and HTML5 technologies. Adobe Flash’s CPU sucking days are numbered.

Never much liked the default theme, Strata, but with Personas, I now have a brushed metal look that makes the browser appear slicker. Another new feature is the squiggly line under misspelled words, easier to spot than the old straight line when I’m typing.

Soon after installing Namoroka, I came upon Google’s Public DNS. I updated the network settings on my laptop and so far, so much faster.

If we ever find it’s true
That we have the strength to choose
Oh, free of all the chains, we have together

Happy Birthday Firefox!

Monday November 9, 2009

Five years of Firefox.

Firefox Pilot

On November 9, 2004, Firefox 1.0 was released. At the time, Internet Explorer held a commanding 99% market share.

Today, Internet Explorer has shrunk to 65% and Firefox is at 23%. Had Microsoft kept their huge market share, the Internet would be a very different place today, controlled by one company hell bent on domination.

My thanks goes out to the Firefox developers and the community that sprung up to promote and extend this excellent open source browser.

Now we sink into a summer afternoon
Central Park in June
Marveling at the bounty our days contain
And we feel it like the shiver of a passing train

Portable Apps

Tuesday October 27, 2009

KeePass led me back to PortableApps.

Portable Apps

PortableApps has been around for 5 years. The brainchild of John T. Haller, it started out as a way to run Firefox off a USB stick and has evolved from there. Now that John is including freeware apps alongside open source apps, it has become my laptop on a stick solution.

USB sticks have come down in price, I picked up an 8gb Sandisk Cruzer for $20 at Walmart. Every application I use on a daily basis is available as a portable app and running nicely on the Cruzer. Now I don’t need to carry my laptop around with me, just find an available USB slot on any family, friend or hotel computer and I’m productive.

With USB 3.0 around the corner and SSD drives making their way into Netbooks, I envision a time when our personal computer will just be a encrypted thumb drive we stick in our pocket.

You got your pertinent information, or you can tune in to hear the scores
There’s a power in a million stations you can’t ignore

Philips VoIP 151

Tuesday October 20, 2009

Needed a better way to talk on Skype.

Philips VoIP 151

Spent a while researching phones to use with Skype, I wanted a Wi-Fi model but settled on the USB connected Philips VoIP 151 phone.

Philips loads a sound driver, that once properly configured, handles all the sounds coming to and from Skype. The phone sounds fine, I can hear the other party and they can hear me.

The phone rings rather loud, so no more missed calls because the computer speakers are playing music at a low level. There is access to your contacts from the phone, it’s like a remote control to Skype and it works well.

Belkin, Philips, Netgear and IPEVO all had Wi-Fi offerings but no model stood up to user reviews. I’m hoping that 2010 brings new choices, so I can carry my phone around the house and take it with me when I travel.

Hello, how are you?
Have you been alright?
Through all the lonely, lonely, lonely, lonely, lonely nights

avast! 5 replaces MSE

Thursday October 15, 2009

Gave Microsoft Security Essentials a try, but I decided to go back to avast!.

avast!

Microsoft’s privacy policy made me feel a bit uneasy and this reporting to SpyNet had me wondering when Arnold would be knocking down my door looking for Sarah Connor.

avast! 5 is almost finished, the final release is targeted at the release of Windows 7 on October 22, so I installed Beta v5.0.167 on my laptop.

Surprisingly it feels lighter than MSE, which is the main reason I gave MSE a trial run in the first place. avast! 5 comes with a new user interface, much nicer than the Winamp skin look in version 4. Scanning of Gmail accounts is now possible with the program handling the secure sign-on to Google’s servers. You have to revert to 110 for POP and 25 for SMTP in Thunderbird as the informative popups from avast! ask you to do.

My favorite change is the female voice that quietly informs me in the morning that the virus definitions have been updated, less authoritative than the old male voice bringing you to attention.

I wanna devise a virus to bring dire straits to your environment
Crush your corporations with a mild touch
Trash your whole computer system and revert you to papyrus

KeePass Password Safe

Monday October 12, 2009

The common sense approach to passwords is to never write them down.

KeePass

Using the same password for everything, because it’s easy to remember, is not a good idea either. Passwords of 16 characters and above, made up of upper and lowercase letters, numbers and special symbols give you the best protection. Each one of your online accounts should have a uniquely generated !p@a#s$s%w^o&r*d(_:).

Password managers, tiny vaults of digital information, allow you to have one master password combination that gains you access to all of your stored credentials. KeePass, an Open Source application open to scrutiny, is one such password safe. With web browser integration, it’s an unzip and run solution that sits nicely on a USB drive.

I was brain-dead, locked out, numb, not up to speed
I thought I’d pegged you an idiot’s dream
Tunnel vision from the outsider’s screen

Windows 7 has Mobility issues

Tuesday October 6, 2009

My laptop graphics card is not working well in Windows 7.

Windows 7

My 4 year old Gateway 7508GX laptop, has an ATI Mobilty Radeon X600 graphics chip that has already gone into legacy mode. AMD won’t supply Windows 7 drivers, so I’m at the mercy of Microsoft.

There were issues running Windows 7 Beta, and they continued with RC1. I was hoping that the final release would solve the problems, but that wasn’t the case as I found out this weekend when a friend on TechNet allowed me to use his copy of Windows 7 final to test with.

All throughout testing Windows 7, blue screens were the norm for me, couldn’t quite figure out the problem. When I attached an external monitor to my laptop, I couldn’t get dual monitors to work, the external monitor would take over and the laptop screen would blank out.

The only way I found out how to use both monitors was a bit of voodoo suggested by vool74 on this thread at the TechNet forums. Screwing around with my laptop’s lid and invoking standby mode is not my idea of a solution, so I’ll pass on Windows 7 on October 22.

Tell me, why should it be you have the power to hypnotize me?
Let me live ‘neath your spell, do do that voodoo that you do so well.