hawker wrote:
So I just got to wondering if most of us Seamonkey people are just Netscape hold ons that are not comfortable with the FireFox/Thunderbird interface for whatever reason?

Anyone out there a Seamonkey user who was not a Netscape users?
As for me I started on Netscape 1.x though 4.6x then skipped to Netscape 7.x (6.x never worked well for me), on to Mozilla Suite and then Seamonkey. Firefox/Thunderbird never felt comfortable to me since I knew Netscape better and so I stay here with Seamonkey.

I'm asking all this because I'm currently questing why I am staying on Seamonkey. I like a few things about it over Firefox/Thunderbird but with 2.0 out and many extensions broken or no longer supporting Seamonkey - all of which still work in Firefox I'm questing why I'm so resistant to go over th Firefox. Seamonkey just isn't getting the support it did when it was still Mozilla Suite unfortunately (a fact I don't want to accept).

I'm also still, on some computers, still a Eudora user even though that program, with all that is great about it, is getting almost to the point of unusable with poor current standards support. So perhaps I'm just an anachronism wishing still for the days of 110baud teletype BBSs again ;)


Anyone want to wax philosophical about this?

Hawker

I stay with it mainly for it's user configurable security features, and the fact that I like it for it's integrated browser/mail/usenet suite - it's convenient.

But like yourself, I'm beginning to question my loyalty to it - particularly in light of the random changes to the interface which either deny me the utility I once praised, eliminate it entirely, or confuse me as to it's current state after it's alleged "upgrade".

There are a number of enterprise customers I support which still hang onto NS (in place of IE) in some situations because of some of that aforementioned configurability and functionality that I have personally been trying to get to look at Seamonkey (for it's comparable certificate handling, strong 128 bit encryption, cookie management, etc.) as an update/upgrade...but I'm not really sure I should continue to do that at this point.

Some of those customers are now using Firefox in place of NS, but that doesn't really get me what I desire - these customers generally use MS Outlook, and so the suite concept doesn't sell with them. The lack of status information in the dialog boxes regarding the aforementioned attributes is certainly not reassuring to such customers...and then there's those stupid tiny buttons...and that's just two starting points of departure when it comes to addressing an enterprise user base...

I may start paying more attention the Firefox/Thunderbird solution myself...I've been tinkering with TB 3.0 and so far I'm far more pleased with it than I have been with SM 2.0. If Firefox offers the control I like(d) in SM, I may just switch. If it's good enough for corporations, it's probably good enough for me.

--
     - Rufus
_______________________________________________
support-seamonkey mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey

Reply via email to