Fortunately there is mail/mutt and perhaps even better mail/neomutt.Unfortunately there are few CLI programs usable due to today's requisites (html mail, xoauth2, etc).
Apple mail and Chrome![]()
Having multiple level of indentation will make that view pretty ugly to use and useless in smaller screens...
I long for the days when email was just plain text, anything else was an attachment.
I've used mutt and alpine in the past, but inbound mail got too "fancy".
I find that HTML-only mail are usually not worth reading anyway, especially if they don't display clearly in lynx.
Very sad indeed. I've been using Thunderbird for more than a decade. Receiving about 100-200 e-mails per day. Have gigabytes of archives, everything was working perfectly - very few bugs, pretty fast, it was a Swiss watch. The interface was fine. Dated, yes, but it worked, and wasn't interfering with the workflow. There were absolutely zero reasons for them to do all that Supernova stuff. I wonder if they're trying to make the whole thing into some HTML/CSS abomination to run it "in the cloud" or in the browser. Meaning there is a chance Thunderbird has little future as a stand-alone app, unless they change course again.Betterbird restores the threaded view, but is still based on the "Supernova" nonsense. I've seen this moment coming for a long time, but I'm still sad about giving up on Thunderbird after more than two decades.
Thanks for this, I may have to revisit.Reading html mail with alpine has an advantage: it does not automatically open the links with images.
set "do not automatically download attachments"
Dooble is working quite smoothly for me.Minimal browsers are great, but would prefer something with a normal GUI.
You know how some operations pop up a dialog "Are you sure you want to...." then there are two buttons, Yes and No? Imagine you've used this software for a long time, the Yes button was always on the right, but the latest update flipped them and now the No is on the right?I haven't used Thunderbird for years, but I'm curious as to how Firefox can be ruined by a UI redesign - surely it's just a box with a web page in it.