

Thunderbird is both free and freedom respecting, but we’re also completely funded by donations! Help us sustain the project and continue to improve. The post Thunderbird Is Thriving: Our 2022 Financial Report appeared first on The Thunderbird Blog. Not just in 2023, but decades into the future! This was a bright, assertive sign that you want to see Thunderbird thriving. Last year, our mighty donor base contributed a record-breaking amount in donations to the Thunderbird project. Thunderbird Is Thriving: Our 2022 Financial Report

The post Thunderbird for Android / K-9 Mail: April Progress Report appeared first on The Thunderbird Blog. In April 2023, we finally published K-9 Mail 6.600. We're back with another progress report as we continue improving K-9 Mail for its transformation to Thunderbird for Android! We spent most of the previous month preparing for a new stable release. Thunderbird for Android / K-9 Mail: April Progress Report The post Introducing The Brand New Thunderbird Logo! appeared first on The Thunderbird Blog.

We asked Jon Hicks, the creator of the original Firefox and Thunderbird logos, to re-imagine his iconic design in light of Thunderbird’s exciting future. Introducing The Brand New Thunderbird Logo! Keep yourself up to date with recent announcements and releases by following the official Thunderbird Blog! With Add-ons (Extensions & Themes) and many more features you can change the look and feel of Thunderbird in an instant. Multiple features, such as built-in Do Not Track and remote content blocking, work together to ensure your safety and privacy, so you can have peace of mind. Focus on what matters and forget about complexity. You can switch your phone's defaults for your email client to K-9 or MailDroid and it will act as if it is nicely built into Android.Thunderbird makes email better for you, bringing together speed, privacy and the latest technologies. I'd just switch to K-9 or MailDroid instead, which properly allow the use of a server-side sent folder for sending messages. If you insist on using the built-in Android email client, you can periodically manually bulk move all of your local phone sent emails into your server-side sent mail folder. This is an Android problem and not a IMAP problem. This means that the sent folders of your phone and your server will not be in sync. It insists on using a local phone sent folder when sending email. You MAY be referring to a problem in some Android versions with the built-in email client where Android's email client will not allow you to use a server-side sent folder as the folder used to store sent email from the phone. It works for received and sent emails as well as anything else on the server, including folders of stored or archived emails. You are incorrect that IMAP only works for received emails.
