

In somewhat of a purist email legacy mode we have Becky!, Pegasus and Poco-Barca, yet each one has its current situation. Outlook has its own world (and maybe PIM clones like Essential PIM?) em Client also compares themselves to Mail and LiveMail. SeaMonkey is a minor player, also like Postbox built on Thunderbird. Other less techie and robust alternatives include eM Client, the more Outlook-type program that some use.

Quick mention of about ten other email programs.

However, it has recently become ready for prime-time.Īnd I mostly use Eudora and TheBat!, later in the thread I can explain why I use both. Feature improvements is very limited for Hermes, since the core code is Eudora. virtual mailboxes would be possible, although I do not expect that they are currently on the road-map). Note that it has the potential to add some features, (e.g. Pandora is an excellent attempt to make a "Eudora-like" program by a gentleman named Brana. (Penelope was a Thunderbird attempt to have a Eudora look-and-feel that went nowhere.) It is unlikely that much of the core code would be rewritten, since the tools today are very different than 25 years ago. Other things might be updated, like fonts or emojies. Hermes is a new project built on the Eudora source code, which Qualcomm, after some hesitation, nicely put into the public domain! The main purpose is to fix those areas, like encyrption and certificates, where Eudora might fail. The server will time out, or refuse the connection. This means that the original Eudora 7 download will, in some cases, (and increasing) not download mail. especially the biz email, or resets of passwords, etc.Įudora 7, a fantastic email program, is hitting more modern encyrption demands like TSL 1.1 and 1.2. Various Gmail accounts that simply forward to the Verizon-AOL and then any deletion of the Gmail is at leisure, usage is mostly "that day" or if for some reason my home base client is less accessible. Runbox (small account, downloaded by POP)
