Welcome to the club on Thunderbird. Here are a few extensions for you.
TagZilla: Insert/Snarf quotes into messages automatically or with the touch of a button
QuoteCollapse: Collapse the quotes like folding in some editors while reading mail
QuoteColors: Changes the colors of quotes at each depth in the reply. Much easier to track who says what.
Buttons!: I got this for the delete thread button
Display Mail User Agent Extension: Fun to see what folks are using. Puts an icon in the headers area to represent the Mailer used.
External editor: Lets you run your favorite editor at the touch of a button for email.
Mnenhy: Just adding my weight on this one. Great plugin. I missed customizing the viewable headers in KMail.
MOZILLA PLUGINS =============== Tab Mix: A bit heavy, but some nice features for tabs.
SearchBox Updater: grabs google search, and puts it in the MyCroft search box.
Context Search: Adds MyCroft searches to the context menu
AdBlock: Get rid of those flashy/flash banners that are so annoying.
Add BookMark Here: Adds menu option to all bookmark menus, so you don't have to use the add bookmark box
Print Preview: Why didn't they build this in.
Live HTTP Headers: handy if you manage servers, or author web sites. Displays HTTP headers while browsing
Flat Bookmark Editing: Adds dialog at the bottom of bookmark editing, so you can edit the details without right clicking and choosing properties.
BugMeNot: Works some of the time. When it does, it lets you avoid giving your email address away to every information site.
Greasemonkey: This is almost an extension manager inside the extension manager. It lets you script so many things, and apply them to only specific sites. In the google section of scripts, there is CustomizeGoogle that lets you do some cool things, and About.Com remover that removes all those annoying about.com sites from the searches.
Tracy R Reed wrote: > Pretty cool stuff. But this is all pretty simple as far as applications > go. I need to take another look at XUL and the other Mozilla > technologies to see how much potential Mozilla itself has as an > application platform. I think I may have even seen a book on this
You might want to look at http://mab.mozdev.org. This started as a proof of concept for XUL, and has become pretty cool over time.
--
"I didn't really say everything I said."
--Yogi Bera
-- [email protected] http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list
