Vielleicht bin ich in der Beziehung "old school" aber ich konnte mich noch nie mit einem Online Mail Client anfreunden, alleine schon deshalb nicht, weil ich immer noch der Meinung bin, ich möchte meine Mails im reinen Ascii und von einem Virenscanner und einem eigenen Spam Filter vorgefiltert. Jetzt kündigt die Mozilla Foundation an, sie ziehe Entwickler vom Thunderbird Projekt ab und werde die Weiterentwicklung einstellen. Das bedeutet nicht zwangsläufig das Ende von Thunderbird, da wir das ja von anderen Programmen kennen wie OpenOffice, das erst in den Händen der Community richtig aufblühte und nach der Übernahme von Oracle Gott sei Dank in LibreOffice weiterlebt. Aber ärgerlich ist es schon, wenn ein sehr gutes Stück Software, das längst weit über einen reinen EMail Client hinausgeht, derart vernachlässigt wird. Mich würde interessieren, wie ruft ihr eure EMails ab? Welche Clients nutzt ihr, oder geht ihr wirklich alle "nur noch auf die Webmailer" ? Hier die EMail über die Entscheidung im vollen Wortlaut: Hello Mozillians: On Monday Mitchell Baker will be posting on the future of Thunderbird. We'd like you to be aware of it before it goes public. However, this is *confidential* until the post is pushed live Monday afternoon PDT. Please don't tweet, blog or discuss on public mailing lists before then. In summary, we've been focusing efforts towards important web and mobile projects, such as B2G, while Thunderbird remains a pure desktop-only email client. We have come to the conclusion that continued innovation on Thunderbird is not the best use of our resources given our ambitious organizational goals. The most critical needs for the product are on-going security and stability for our 20+ million users. However, Thunderbird is one of the very few truly free and open source multi-platform email applications available today and we want to defend these values. We're not "stopping" Thunderbird, but proposing we adapt the Thunderbird release and governance model in a way that allows both ongoing security and stability maintenance, as well as community-driven innovation and development for the product. This will mean an eventual shift in how we staff Thunderbird at Mozilla Corporation – we are still working out details, but some people will likely end up on other Mozilla projects. We are going to open this plan for public discussion to individuals and organizations interested in maintaining and advancing Thunderbird in the future on Monday. We are looking for your feedback, comments and suggestions to refine and adapt the plan in the best possible way throughout the summer so we can share a final plan of action in early September 2012. If you have any questions prior to Monday please reach out to me [jb@mozilla.com] or Mitchell [mitchell@mozilla.org]. Again, this information is for Mozillians-only until Mitchell's post goes live. Regards, Jb Piacentino Thunderbird Managing Director Additional information: New release and governance model for Thunderbird will be available here concurrently to Mitchell's post: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird/Proposal:_New_Release_and_Governance_Model Info on Modules and Thunderbird owners: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Modules You're receiving this email because you're a registered Mozillian. We'll send you timely and occasional organizational news and updates – meant just for Mozillians. If you do not wish to receive these updates, please unsubscribe here. Read the Mozilla Privacy Policy. Mozilla 650 Castro Street, Suite 300 Mountain View, CA 94041-2021 (650)903-0800
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