Compare Revisions

Thunderbird FAQ

Revision 119091:

Revision 119091 by Tonnes on

Revision 119132:

Revision 119132 by wsmwk on

Keywords:

about Mozilla
about Mozilla

Search results summary:

This article provides general information about Thunderbird.
This article provides general information about Thunderbird.

Content:

This article provides general information about Thunderbird. __TOC__ = What is Thunderbird? = Thunderbird is a free, open-source, cross-platform application for managing email, news feeds, chat, and news groups. It is a local (rather than a browser or web-based) email application that is powerful yet easy-to-use. See [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/features/ Thunderbird features] for a summary of the features. = Who makes Thunderbird? = Thunderbird is developed, tested, translated and supported by the folks at Mozilla Corporation and by a group of [https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird#Contributing dedicated volunteers]. Mozilla Corporation is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the non-profit [http://www.mozilla.org/ Mozilla Foundation]. = Why should I use Thunderbird? = Thunderbird is free. Thunderbird has many [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/features/ cool features]. Thunderbird gives '''you''' control and ownership over your email. There are many [https://addons.mozilla.org/thunderbird/ add-ons available for Thunderbird] to extend and customize your email experience. Thunderbird is part of the [https://www.mozilla.org/about/manifesto Mozilla Manifesto], a pledge that describes Mozilla's commitment to an open, accessible, egalitarian Internet. = Is Thunderbird free? = Yes! Thunderbird is open source software. Anyone can download and use the program for free, and view and modify the source code under the terms of the [https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ license]. = Where can I download Thunderbird? = Download Thunderbird [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/ here]. Or use these links for [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/all.html different languages], [https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/channel/ beta versions], [https://releases.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbird/releases/ old versions], and the [https://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/ source code]. = Is Thunderbird available in my language? = Thunderbird has many dedicated volunteer translators who translate each version. If you do not find your language at [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/all.html here], you can [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Projects/Thunderbird/Thunderbird_Localization contribute] to develop a localized version, with the help of the [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Localization community of volunteers]. = Is Thunderbird available for my platform? = Probably. Windows, Mac and Linux are available from the [http://getthunderbird.com download page]. For other operating systems, you can [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Developer_guide/Build_Instructions/Simple_Thunderbird_build build Thunderbird from the source code]. = What is my Thunderbird email address? = Thunderbird is an '''email application''', so it does not provide email addresses, nor the service to transmit emails. But Thunderbird can be used with any existing email address and service to send, receive, sort and search your email messages. If you do not have an email address, you may apply to a service when you first start Thunderbird. Common email address and service providers include: * Internet Service Providers (ISPs): When you sign up for internet access through an ISP they usually give you one or more email accounts. * Web-based: Many web sites provide email accounts. These include [https://mail.google.com Google], [https://mail.yahoo.com/ Yahoo!], [https://mail.live.com/ Windows Live Hotmail], and others. * Corporate: Employers often provide their employees with email accounts. All of these email accounts can be used with Thunderbird. In fact, with Thunderbird you can access mail from multiple accounts at the same time. All you need to do is [[Automatic Account Configuration|set up your account]]. = Where is my personal information (such as my messages, passwords, account information, etc) stored? = Thunderbird stores your personal stuff on your local drive. If you are using the IMAP protocol for accessing messages, your messages are also on your email server. See [[IMAP Synchronization]] for more information. = Where can I get help with using Thunderbird? = All support is web-based. This site (the Knowledge Base) has [https://support.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird many articles] that may help you. Check out Thunderbird's [https://support.mozilla.org/questions/thunderbird support forum], where you can ask a question or search for issues and answers similar to your own. Also, the MozillaZine community has a [http://kb.mozillazine.org/Knowledge_Base library of articles] and a [http://forums.mozillazine.org/ forum]. Because of the ratio of Thunderbird staff to Thunderbird users (about 15 to 5,000,000) we cannot provide direct support services i.e. '''Mozilla does not offer support via email, fax, chat, phone nor paid support'''. Instead we rely on our community to help each other, and hope that you, a Thunderbird user, will become a Thunderbird community member. (See below on how to help.) = Can I help? = Yes! Please do! *Help other Thunderbird users with [https://support.mozilla.org/questions/thunderbird Thunderbird questions] and in the [https://support.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird Thunderbird KB]. *Help with the Thunderbird [https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:Testing testing and QA effort]. *Write or improve [[Contribute to Mozilla|documentation for end users]]. (Anyone can write documentation in plain English, German, Japanese, French or any of the many languages in which folks have written Thunderbird documentation. Do not be afraid to submit unpolished writing - our editors and writers will polish it for you!) *Programmers can get started by writing [https://developer.mozilla.org/Add-ons/Thunderbird extensions] to Thunderbird. Source code core development processes and resources are described [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Thunderbird here].
This article provides general information about Thunderbird. __TOC__ = What is Thunderbird? = Thunderbird is a free, open-source, cross-platform application for managing email, news feeds, chat, and news groups. It is a local (rather than a browser or web-based) email application that is powerful yet easy-to-use. See [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/features/ Thunderbird features] for a summary of the features. = Who makes Thunderbird? = Thunderbird is developed, tested, translated and supported by the folks at Mozilla Corporation and by a group of [https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird#Contributing dedicated volunteers]. Mozilla Corporation is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the non-profit [http://www.mozilla.org/ Mozilla Foundation]. = Why should I use Thunderbird? = Thunderbird is free. Thunderbird has many [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/features/ cool features]. Thunderbird gives '''you''' control and ownership over your email. There are many [https://addons.mozilla.org/thunderbird/ add-ons available for Thunderbird] to extend and customize your email experience. Thunderbird is part of the [https://www.mozilla.org/about/manifesto Mozilla Manifesto], a pledge that describes Mozilla's commitment to an open, accessible, egalitarian Internet. = Is Thunderbird free? = Yes! Thunderbird is open source software. Anyone can download and use the program for free, and view and modify the source code under the terms of the [https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ license]. = Where can I download Thunderbird? = Download Thunderbird [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/ here]. Or use these links for [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/all.html different languages], [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/channel/ beta versions], [https://releases.mozilla.org/pub/thunderbird/releases/ old versions], and the [https://releases.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/ source code]. = Is Thunderbird available in my language? = Thunderbird has many dedicated volunteer translators who translate each version. If you do not find your language at [https://www.mozilla.org/thunderbird/all.html here], you can [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Projects/Thunderbird/Thunderbird_Localization contribute] to develop a localized version, with the help of the [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Localization community of volunteers]. = Is Thunderbird available for my platform? = Probably. Windows, Mac and Linux are available from the [http://getthunderbird.com download page]. For other operating systems, you can [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Developer_guide/Build_Instructions/Simple_Thunderbird_build build Thunderbird from the source code]. = What is my Thunderbird email address? = Thunderbird is an '''email application''', so it does not provide email addresses, nor the service to transmit emails. But Thunderbird can be used with any existing email address and service to send, receive, sort and search your email messages. If you do not have an email address, you may apply to a service when you first start Thunderbird. Common email address and service providers include: * Internet Service Providers (ISPs): When you sign up for internet access through an ISP they usually give you one or more email accounts. * Web-based: Many web sites provide email accounts. These include [https://mail.google.com Google], [https://mail.yahoo.com/ Yahoo!], [https://mail.live.com/ Windows Live Hotmail], and others. * Corporate: Employers often provide their employees with email accounts. All of these email accounts can be used with Thunderbird. In fact, with Thunderbird you can access mail from multiple accounts at the same time. All you need to do is [[Automatic Account Configuration|set up your account]]. = Where is my personal information (such as my messages, passwords, account information, etc) stored? = Thunderbird stores your personal stuff on your local drive. If you are using the IMAP protocol for accessing messages, your messages are also on your email server. See [[IMAP Synchronization]] for more information. = Where can I get help with using Thunderbird? = All support is web-based. This site (the Knowledge Base) has [https://support.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird many articles] that may help you. Check out Thunderbird's [https://support.mozilla.org/questions/thunderbird support forum], where you can ask a question or search for issues and answers similar to your own. Also, the MozillaZine community has a [http://kb.mozillazine.org/Knowledge_Base library of articles] and a [http://forums.mozillazine.org/ forum]. Because of the ratio of Thunderbird staff to Thunderbird users (about 15 to 5,000,000) we cannot provide direct support services i.e. '''Mozilla does not offer support via email, fax, chat, phone nor paid support'''. Instead we rely on our community to help each other, and hope that you, a Thunderbird user, will become a Thunderbird community member. (See below on how to help.) = Can I help? = Yes! Please do! *Help other Thunderbird users with [https://support.mozilla.org/questions/thunderbird Thunderbird questions] and in the [https://support.mozilla.org/products/thunderbird Thunderbird KB]. *Help with the Thunderbird [https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:Testing testing and QA effort]. *Write or improve [[Contribute to Mozilla|documentation for end users]]. (Anyone can write documentation in plain English, German, Japanese, French or any of the many languages in which folks have written Thunderbird documentation. Do not be afraid to submit unpolished writing - our editors and writers will polish it for you!) *Programmers can get started by writing [https://developer.mozilla.org/Add-ons/Thunderbird extensions] to Thunderbird. Source code core development processes and resources are described [https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Thunderbird here].

Back to History