Open letter to Jon concerning M3
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@luetage I think its not senseless to remember the devs for our needings
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I think the new mail-client needs a name more colourful than M3. That's fine for devs or those familiar with M2, who can know that it is a continuation from the earlier client. How about something connected with the Vivaldi name:
- Vivaldi Symphony
- Vivaldi Duet
- etc.?
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@pesala said in Open letter to Jon concerning M3:
I think the new mail-client needs a name more colourful than M3. That's fine for devs or those familiar with M2, who can know that it is a continuation from the earlier client. How about something connected with the Vivaldi name:
- Vivaldi Symphony
- Vivaldi Duet
- etc.?
That sure would be nice. Although I think M3 is fine as well. Maybe we could keep both names, kinda like how, for example, on GNOME the file manager is now called Files but the repo name and internal name is still Nautilus. So maybe we could give the email client a colorful name but refer to it internally and on the forums as M3?
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@pesala I'm kind of partial to Vivaldi Melody... it has a mail-like ring to it.
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Looks like M3 is coming in 2020.
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@saudiqbal said in Open letter to Jon concerning M3:
Looks like M3 is coming in 2020.
There will be a joint ceremony for the presentation of M3 and the opening of BER
(for non-Germans: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin_Brandenburg_Airport#Timeline ) -
Oh come on, you know its much easier to build an international airport than to create a new mail client from scratch
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@zhnujm Well, there are far more international airports than browsers with built in mail clients, therefore your assumption must be correct.
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@zhnujm Not with a team of only 12 workers, and various other staff such as project managers, and media people. Building a new airport takes years of planning and a team of thousands.
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All of these inquiries about M3 release date. And the one simple answer...
"It will be released when it's ready. And only when it's ready."
I want a finished product. It should be polished and shiny and easy to look at.
Aesthetic pleasing. And very functional. -
@pesala said in Open letter to Jon concerning M3:
Building a new airport takes years of planning and a team of thousands.
I think thats missing at the BER. :lol
And i still think the mail client will get dropped.
But Vivaldi is still my favorite brower because of tab stacking. -
@gwen-dragon Spelling checkers aren't as helpful as one would think, this reminds me of "candidate for a pullet surprise". A classic
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Sadly, after years of waiting for M3 I'm finally moved to Thunderbird. As i wrote in my opening post in this thread, it's a decision for years. It was impossible to continue using M2 because security leaks and permanently crashing after few minutes.
Believe me that this decision was not easy but neccessary. And no, i will not went back to M3 if it releases sooner or later.
So sad
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@codehunter It is sad, especially that M2 was unstable for you. It is completely stable here. It is, in fact, still my default email. Unfortunately, there has never been any choice as to how early to release M3. It is a project, at its core, which is larger and more complex than a browser. And though some dozens of us use it daily, it is genuinely not ready for public release. And although some tire of hearing this, I'm sure, it really does grow closer and closer to release quality all the time. Basically every single new internal tester release contains updates and fixes for M3.
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I'm still using M2, but for the newly released Linux Mint 19, there are dependencies that I have to ignore in order to install. Seems some of the packages are obsolete now, so it is getting more difficult to stick with it.
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@codehunter Thunderbird isn't so bad. I switched to it from M2 years ago. You can do almost all of the same things. You just set them up differently. You can also do a lot of things M2 can't. The downside is that Thunderbird x64 still isn't a first-class citizen.
@codehunter said in Open letter to Jon concerning M3:
And no, i will not went back to M3 if it releases sooner or later.
With Thunderbird's feature set, it'll be hard for M3 to compete. But, M3 could still be fun.
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I've made many tests to get M2 running stable. But unfortunately, even on a completely fresh installed Windows without any other 3rd party software, M2 crashes permanently. If i disable the graphics driver and switch back to CPU (not GPU!) rendered GDI, it is stable. But a system without accellerated graphics is unusable. If this would be the only issue, i would have to move M2 into a VM. But as a second issue, my mail provider has notified that unencrypted SMTP will be deactivated for security reasons. I had never get M2 working with the secured SMTP of my mail provider - always "Authentication failed". In summary, my beloved M2 is knocked out, whensoever the secured SMTP is forced.
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@codehunter I don't know why your experience is so different from mine. I have been using M2 in Opera 12.18 since Opera 5.0. I have four POP3 accounts with different providers, and rarely experienced problems. My ancient NTL account still works most of the time (only yesterday it failed to fetch emails for half a day), normally the account checks every 10 minutes whenever I am online. The other account emails are fetched whenever I check manually.
I hardly use Opera for browsing at all, only for editing local HTML files, or for opening a troublesome URL in other browsers for testing. I run it on my secondary monitor for its email client.
I look forward to the day when I can remove Opera, but if I cannot import my email and contacts, M3 (or whatever) will not be useful. I don't store many emails, but what I do keep is an important record of past correspondence.
Specs: AMD A10-6800K, 8 Gb on Win 10 64-bit • Snapshot 1.16.1230.3 (64-bit)
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@Pesala 100% ACK. I've used M2 for nearly two decades. My last other mail client was Outlook Express on Win 98. Unbelievable! So long... M2 was working fine ever until i had bought an new Intel driven notebook. From there M2 became a nightmare. I think this is also the answer why your expierience is so different from mine, you use most likely other hardware.
As i noticed before, it seems to be an similar bug like the one in Corel Paint Shop Pro X2. In a supported product, its likely easy to fix. But no one works on O12/OM. And Intel has already said that they not want to solve the issue at the driver level.
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@ugly Just download ftp://ftp.opera.com/pub/opera/linux/1216/opera-12.16-1860.x86_64.linux.tar.xz, extract it to where you want and run the opera exe right from the folder. Its profile will be contained in the "profile" folder right in that folder. Then, in Opera's settings under "Advanced -> Programs", add http and https protocols and set them to open with the browser you want. No conflict or dependency issues on Linux Mint 19 x64 when doing things that way.