

Finally, the "User Name" field is your email address (for example, Click OK. The "Authentication method" should be set to Normal password. The "Connection security" field should be set to SSL/TLS. For "Description" you can enter Outgoing. Click Outgoing Server and click "Add" in the Outgoing Server (SMTP) Settings.Ĩ. You'll be back at the "Account Settings" box. Thunderbird will once again perform a setting configuration. The SSL dropdown settings should be set to SSL/TLS and Authentication to Normal Password for both "Incoming" and "Outgoing". Choose POP3 or IMAP for the "Incoming" setting.

Once Thunderbird finishes its search, enter in your "Username" (your email address, for example, the "Incoming" server which is the mail server name located in your account sheet (ie, ) and the "Outgoing" server which is also "". Thunderbird will then begin to search for email settings. Be sure to check "Remember password" and then click Next.Ĥ. In the new "Account Settings" box that appears, click on "Account Actions" then "Add Mail Account."ģ.
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Add your Corporate Communications email account by selecting Account Settings under the Tools menu.Ģ. Statista and The Radicati Group are both finding that both the number of e-mail users and its sheer volume continue to grow ever larger.1. Finally, if you think that e-mail is dying thanks to competition from programs like Teams, Slack, and Zoom, think again. According to Statista, 18% of all e-mail users are still using desktop e-mail clients. And although most users now use web-based e-mail services, such as Gmail and Microsoft 365, millions still like standalone e-mail clients. Within the next few months, in the forthcoming Thunderbird 78.2, the program will finally get the long-anticipated power to encrypt end-to-end email messages via OpenPGP.ĭespite all of Mozilla's efforts to get rid of Thunderbird, the program is living on. Its biggest feature is its Lightning calendar, and tasks add-on has finally been completely integrated into the program. The latest version, Thunderbird 78, comes with many minor improvements. Now, Thunderbird, under MZLA, is charting its own course. By May 2017, Mozilla re-committed to the project and active development started again. Nothing came of those suggestions, but Thunderbird's loyal users rallied to the beleaguered program with financial donations.
