Showing posts with label open source. Show all posts
Showing posts with label open source. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Thunderbird still sucks

The last time I used Mozilla Thunderbird it was in Windows, I was trying to stay away from Outlook. Eventually it was so infuriating that it drove me back to Outlook.


That was over two years ago.


I also tried to use Mail.app but the problem is that it doesn't play nice with Outlook. My boss uses Outlook, that means *I* have to make sure I send the emails so he can see them OK, not the other way around. There is a weird incompatibility between Mail.app and Outlook due to Unicode: sometimes Outlook can't tell that the message should be set to Unicode.


The only fix I know is to add a Unicode character to my signature, which would force the whole message to be Unicode and Outlook will see it properly.


I switched back to Mail.app a couple of months ago because I did not wanted to keep Parallels open just to reply to work email, and the Unicode signature hack more or less worked, but I found another problem: many times I was replying to emails thinking it was in rich text mode, when in reality it was sending the email in plain text, something that dear leader hates.


This week I finally broke down and tried the newest Thunderbird. To my dismay, it could not even import emails from Mail.app, and their instructions on how to do it by hand were completely and absolutely wrong. After three or four days I found a program that lets me export Mail.app mailboxes one at a time, then a Thunderbird extension that can read these exported files.


The end result? I got all 25,000 or so emails, but once again, I hate Thunderbird.



  1. Search sucks.


  2. The preferences suck.


  3. It took me over five minutes to find out where the hell to change my signature.


  4. My signature comes out as plain text no matter what. If I add html markup to it, it encodes it. If I try rich text, it encodes it.


  5. No smart mailboxes!


I could go on.


I even tried Mailsmith, but it is god damn ugly, and it won't do html emails. I hate Eudora with passion, there is no way in hell I am going to use that voluntarily. And I can't use my favorite email, Gmail, because when I use impersonation Outlook says "email sent by user@gmail.com on behalf of user@domain.com."


What else is out there for 10.5? Even if it costs money, I just want something that works at least as good as Mail.app but with less html email drama.



Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Where is your God now?


For years the FOSS camp has taken for granted that one of the reasons that open source / free software technologies will always be superior is because of the price of admission. Microsoft and many others simply charge too much damn money for their development tools. Any of us that have been around the Microsoft camp for long know that programming for ASP.net and SQL Server costs a pretty penny, plus every server that the solution is installed to has to pay for licensing. We usually don’t care about the end server licensing since the customer pays for it, but we do care about how expensive the tools are. This is why most of us are glad to jump at the opportunity to grab a MSDN license, since it is the only way that most of our shops can afford to use these products legally.


But what happens when Microsoft turns around and says, “you know what, fuck FOSS. Let the college kids use all our tools for free, so when they graduate they will be proficient and will pursue Microsoft-centric jobs.”


How the hell do you offset this? If the programmer doesn’t have to spend a penny for the tools to learn, then what is the motivation to spend his time on the FOSS toolset when he damn well knows that on graduation the better paying jobs are going to the Microsoft-centric programmers?


Microsoft did just that. College kids can now use the following free of charge, the only condition is third party verification of the student’s school status:



  • Visual Studio 2005 Professional Edition


  • Visual Studio 2008 Professional Edition


  • XNA Game Studio 2.0


  • 12-month free membership in the XNA Creators Club


  • Expression Studio, which includes Expression Web, Expression Blend, Expression Design and Expression Media


  • SQL Server 2005 Developer Edition


  • Windows Server 2003, Standard Edition


  • Sql Server Developer Edition


  • Virtual PC 2007


  • Visual Basic 2005


  • Visual C++ 2005


  • Visual C# 2005


  • Visual J# 2005


  • Visual Web Developer 2005


Oh yes. Can you feel the burn?