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Thunderbird to Leave Mozilla Foundation

An anonymous reader writes "MozillaZine is reporting that Mozilla Thunderbird is to move to a 'new separate organizational setting' as the Mozilla Foundation focuses more and more on Mozilla Firefox. Citing a blog post by Chief Lizard Wrangler Mitchell Baker, MozillaZine outlines the three possibilities for Thunderbird that are being considered: 'one is to create a entirely new non-profit, which would offer maximum independence for Thunderbird but is organisationally complex. A second option is to create a new subsidiary of the Mozilla Foundation for Thunderbird, which would keep the Mozilla Foundation involved but may mean that Thunderbird continues to be neglected in favour of Firefox. A final option is to recast Thunderbird as community project, similar to SeaMonkey, and set up a small independent services and consulting company to continue development. However, there are concerns over how the Thunderbird product, project and company would interact'. Lead Thunderbird developer Scott MacGregor favours the third option."

36 of 239 comments (clear)

  1. I submitted this story yesterday... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Before it even hit MozillaZine... and what do I get? Nothing.

    1. Re:I submitted this story yesterday... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      You get nothing for coming first in life. Just ask Netscape...

    2. Re:I submitted this story yesterday... by pAnkRat · · Score: 3, Funny

      Here in germany I allways say:
      "Wer zuspät kommt, bestraft das Leben,
      wer zu früh kommt, bestraft die Frau."

      in English:
      "He, who commes too late, will be punished by Life.
      He, who commes too early, will be punished by his wife"

      --
      we need an "-1 Plain wrong" moderation option!
  2. Poor thunderbird by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You have to wonder why thunderbird doesn't compete as well in the email marketspace as firefox does in the browser market space. I suspect its because thunderbird doesn't really offer anything more than its competitors and because it has few must-have extensions. But it could also be the prevalence of web mail. So what would make a killer email client?

    1. Re:Poor thunderbird by slapout · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And when you try to find Thunderbird extensions, they're all mixed in with the firefox ones and you can't tell which is for which.

      --
      Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    2. Re:Poor thunderbird by superbus1929 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The few plug-ins I run on Thunderbird are actually listed as Firefox extensions. They're nothing major - dictionaries and the like - but they're not specifically Thunderbird extensions, either. So if they're mixed, that's probably why, but I had confusion looking for them, too.

      --
      Let's stop dilly-dallying and just change "-1: Overrated" to "-1: Disagree" or "-1: Doesn't Subscribe to Groupthink".
    3. Re:Poor thunderbird by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually the latest version of Thunderbird is really nice.
      It has folders which I really do like but it also has tags for those that are into tagging. What is really brilliant is that it allows you to create "folders" that are based on the tags.
      Plugins work fine but you just don't need a lot of them for Email. I use GPGP for signing and encryption. The plugin manager could work better. I would say it isn't great for normal end users.
      I find it fast and a much better program than Outlook. Now if you compare it to Outlook plus Exchange then it really isn't in the same league.
      To me that is the problem. FOSS need a server that will interface with Thunderbird and offer all the same features as Outlook plus exchange and with the same ease of use.
      As I Thunderbird user I can not say I am pleased.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    4. Re:Poor thunderbird by keithjr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the enterprise world, it's not uncommon for companies to not use Outlook but still rely on an Exchange infrastructure. Thunderbird as a standalone mail client is fine, but if it wants to compete it's going to have to integrate much better with robust calendar and resource scheduling programs. Lightning or Sunbird betas aren't going to cut it.

    5. Re:Poor thunderbird by nine-times · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, when you go to a web page and browse for Firefox extensions, you're doing it in Firefox. You click on the link to an extension, it automatically installs, and takes effect immediately. The Thunderbird, you still browse for extensions in your web browser, you have to download them, and then install them into Thunderbird through Thunderbird.

      The whole process feels very different.

    6. Re:Poor thunderbird by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I find it fast and a much better program than Outlook. Now if you compare it to Outlook plus Exchange then it really isn't in the same league. To me that is the problem.

      I think you're right-- that's the problem. How to solve that problem, I don't know, but that is most likely the reason why Thunderbird doesn't have a larger user base.

      I think most people who use e-mail fall into a couple groups.

      • The first is the business power user, for whom nothing matches Outlook+Exchange+Blackberry/WindowMobile. This is a huge market
      • The second group would be very casual users, for whom being able to read their e-mail is sufficient. They'll just use whatever comes on their computer, or else webmail. They really don't care as long as they can send and receive e-mail. This is a huge market.
      • For the sake of the discussion, I'll lump everyone else into a third group, and those are people with particular preferences or specialized needs. These people use the e-mail client they choose or else the e-mail client they need to. This group probably goes to Thunderbird pretty often, but there are still people using things like Pine, or some totally random client.

      The only real group that Thunderbird could go after would be the business users. However, in order to do that, you need to be able to connect to Exchange and do calendars, notes, task lists, and Exchange contact lists. Of course, you could also replace Exchange with something else, but that something else would have to have the same sorts of features, and Thunderbird would still have to connect to it.

      Contrary to what many geeks think, Exchange/Outlook is very helpful for a lot of businesses. Connecting tasks, calendars, e-mail, and contacts all together, and making that available through client software, on the web, and on mobile devices has turned out to be the big-business killer app.

    7. Re:Poor thunderbird by snoyberg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Frankly, the only mail clients I use are GMail and Thunderbird. However, I don't know anyone else (outside of online contacts) who use Thunderbird. My wife uses the Apple mail client, at work we use Lotus Notes, etc. There just seem to be a lot more options, even in the FLOSS spectrum (eg, KMail, Pine, Mutt, etc).

      For whatever reason, it seems like mail clients are much more about taste than a web browser is.

      --
      Thank God for evolution.
    8. Re:Poor thunderbird by guaigean · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You have to wonder why thunderbird doesn't compete as well in the email marketspace as firefox does in the browser market space.

      One word: gmail
      --
      Microsoft Sucks, F/OSS Rocks. I get mod points now right?
    9. Re:Poor thunderbird by suv4x4 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You have to wonder why thunderbird doesn't compete as well in the email marketspace as firefox does in the browser market space.

      Because there's no reason it would. First wave of Firefox adoption was developers and savvy users. They got development extensions and they cared about good CSS/JS support.

      You don't develop for e-mail. You could assemble the occasional HTML email but that's hardly "development".

      Second wave of adoption came from the fact not that Firefox is good, but that IE was bad. No tabs (the mythical tabs) and poor security led companies and users to switch.

      There were some VBS related exploits for Outlook (part of Office) but nothing last few years about Outlook Express (part of Windows). Outlook Express is a very decent mail client, and people just use it for what it is.

      Killer features can't push people to adopt Thunderbird since people care to receive and send their email only. Thunderbirds spam filtering isn't noticed by anyone using Outlook Express. (hm.. what about email tabs...? naah).

    10. Re:Poor thunderbird by Vidar+Leathershod · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I would much prefer that they develop a peer to peer syncing for address book and calendar. I'm tired of dealing with server-side stuff for a business with 3 employees, all on an internal network. Apple Mail should do this too. I keep hearing about CalDAV and the iCal standard, but have yet to see any products that fully support what should be a basic functionality.

      Calendar functionality should be an option during install, and however it needs to be done, compatibility with Mobile devices for synchronization should be implemented. Personally, I use a cell phone, and don't or even like PIMs, but I can't stand having to deal with Outlook just so someone can use a Blackberry.

      Finally, something needs to be done in terms of simple profile migration, and the import/export features need to be more robust. For example, if you want to switch someone to Thunderbird from Outlook Express, you have to activate a profile in Outlook Express. If Thunderbird can't find it in the default location, it doesn't let you choose a WAB file. That is pitiful. Same goes for importing Thunderbird stuff into Thunderbird. It shouldn't be that difficult to prompt for a file location and take it from there.

      --
      The brains of a chicken, coupled with the claws of two eagles, may well hatch the eggs of our destruction.
    11. Re:Poor thunderbird by Rich0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      To put it more simply for those who don't work in corporate land:

      I need to schedule a meeting with 20 people, and book a conference room. Find me the first 1-hour slot when all 20 and any room is free. Now notify everybody about the meeting and tell me if they're going to come - and put everything on everybody's calendars for them.

      No open source package does this to my knowledge. If anything did it as well as Outlook/Exchange it would take off very quickly. Outlook has just-about eliminated the administrative assistant for most ordinary workers...

    12. Re:Poor thunderbird by SillyNickName · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I found this comment by Eyal Rozenberg over on the referenced blog:

      "Over time, the Mozilla Foundation's mission has evolved to focus on advancing the open web through browsing and related activities. Today, Thunderbird, as a desktop mail client, does not supports this mission."

      Translation:

      Over time, Google bought us, so the Mozilla Foundation's mission has evolved to focus on ad-revenue-stream-related activities, and the number of mail&news developers has evolved towards 0. Today, Thunderbird, as a desktop mail client, does not support this mission, plus it's competing with GMail and Larry and Sergeyi say that's just wrong.
    13. Re:Poor thunderbird by bberens · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you turn off the preview pane you won't have this problem. As an aside, turning off the preview pane is also good security practice regardless of your mail client.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
  3. To be honest, Thunderbird is not up to par by Lord+Satri · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect its because thunderbird doesn't really offer anything more than its competitors and because it has few must-have extensions. I use Thunderbird as my only email client at work, but in my opinion, Thunderbird doesn't offer more, it offers less. Not less such as in less bloated, but less such as in features-that-I-would-like-and-I-can-find-in-other -email-clients. The addressbook sucks. Search too. As you said, there isn't enough good extensions so far (e.g. the pitchdark theme that I like so much as not been updated to TB2.0). No support for user tags (no, the "tags" they included in 2.0 (which were there in previous versions) does not count as support for tags). Poor support of non-english characters. etc.

    But why do I keep using it? Because I hope it will become as good as Firefox and switching email clients is never as straightforward as one would like. And I'm not saying FF does not have flaws, in my opinion benefits outweighs the flaws. I'm not sure if this is true with TB. I have no idea, and I'm probably not alone failing to predict the future, if a new status for Thunderbird will actually help the project or not... I guess we'll find out in a few months/years!
  4. What is the Foundation not providing? by kimba · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is disappointing news, and begs the question why the Mozilla Foundation can't provide the needed resources to Thunderbird?

    Given the Mozilla Foundation HAS a substantial amount of money, presumably spinning Thunderbird out into a separate entity will mean Thunderbird will have even less money than it has today because it can not be cross-subsidised by Firefox's search revenues. Spinning Thunderbird out, which will cost it more and earn it less, doesn't sound like a recipe for success if your problem is lack of resources.

  5. Don't Crap On Tbird by tarsi210 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I, for one, am not looking forward to the idea of having Tbird as a community project, unless it is headed by a small team of very focused individuals. A mass free-for-all will simply destroy it due to feature bloat and a multitude of ideas around what an email client should be.

    What should an email client do? How about -- email. Just email. Not email and newsgroups, not email and collaboration, not email and Facebook -- just plain old simple email. Sure, I'll concede to HTML email for you folks who can't stand to not have a little color in your lives and insist on spamming my box with your yellow backgrounds and pink text, but it's still email.

    Tbird is awesome and makes almost no waves because of a) marketing -- the browser wars are much more publicized, b) marketing -- Microsoft isn't really trying to take over the world with Outlook, because they know it sucks, and c) marketing -- There's not much word-of-mouth going on because email mostly works with just about any client and people put up with it, so there's not as much of a scramble for a "good" email client.

    I love the app. It works and works and works and doesn't break and doesn't screw up one of the most important things in my online life, electronic mail. I don't want to see it backburnered by the Foundation, either, but at the same time, I'm happier thinking that the Foundation has their finger on where it's going and so far, I trust that they're not going to make it suck. So I'd be preferable to leaving it their hands for that reason.

  6. Re:Third option by ekstrom · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Eudora's home page http://www.eudora.com/ says that the paid mode Eudora is no longer available, and that an open source version of Eudora is being developed by Mozilla. An article at http://www.mozillazine.org/talkback.html?article=2 0078 says that the new Eudora will be based on the Thunderbird engine. This is apparently the Penelope project http://wiki.mozilla.org/Penelope , which claims not to be trying to supplant Thunderbird, but may be about to do so. Would an insider please clarify all this?

  7. Exactly what I was thinking. by pavon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whatever little Mozilla Foundation is providing to Thunderbird has to be better than nothing, which is what they would be getting from them if they went their own way. Unless the foundation is hindering development in someway, I really don't see the point of spinning off.

  8. Winifred is the problem, not Thunderbird. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Someone with no technical knowledge cannot run a technically oriented company. The Mozilla Foundation needs someone competent. Winifred cannot be the leader of something she doesn't understand. That's Winifred Mitchell Baker, the CEO of Mozilla, an extremely socially uncomfortable lawyer who became CEO when no one thought there was an opportunity. Now that Mozilla Foundation is making millions from making Google the default browser, Winifred can afford to hire people to make herself look good.

    There are many, many quirks in Firefox, not just Thunderbird, that should be fixed, but no technically oriented manager to organize that. For example, the CPU hogging bug has been there for at least 5 years. Winifred has insufficient control over those who work for her, because she doesn't understand what they do. The Firefox CPU hogging and memory gobbling bug would take some serious troubleshooting to find, and no one wants to do the work, apparently. See Firefox development sometimes resembles playing.

    Don't let ignorant and managers destroy your programming efforts. Find some way to have them removed.

    1. Re:Winifred is the problem, not Thunderbird. by bunratty · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Firefox CPU hogging and memory gobbling bug would take some serious troubleshooting to find, and no one wants to do the work, apparently.

      You mean the one where If you open a lot of windows and tabs in Firefox on a laptop, and put the laptop in and out of standby, you will eventually notice that the laptop fan is running all the time, even when there is no activity. That's the CPU bug, and it can potentially shorten the life of your laptop? It looks like it's fixed. As for a "memory gobbling bug", you'll have to describe in much more detail what you mean. Firefox seems to use less memory than other browsers, and in addition, about 100 memory leak bugs have been fixed in the past year.

      If you see a quirk in Firefox, simply write up a bug report specifying in enough detail what the problem is, and it will be fixed. Whining about them on Slashdot is about the least effective thing you can do.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  9. What about Eudora? by richg74 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not too long ago, Qualcomm, the publisher of the Eudora E-mail client, announced that future Eudora versions would be based on Thunderbird. Back in the bad old days when I still had to use Windows, I used Eudora for E-mail -- it was streets ahead of MS Outhouse. Perhaps Mozilla can cook up a deal with Qualcomm.

  10. Huh? by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are many, many quirks in Firefox, not just Thunderbird, that should be fixed, but no technically oriented manager to organize that. That isn't here job and shouldn't be. It is the job of the lead developers. Her responsibility is to manage the non-profit - getting donations making business deals and determining the best way to distribute the budget they have between advertising, upgrading equipment, and paying developers.

    If you have a problems about how she is doing in that role, then say so, but otherwise you are complaining about the wrong person.
  11. Why throw out TB? by Ant+P. · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why not split off Firefox instead, since it's getting most of the attention? Maybe then the Mozilla project can go back to making good software.

  12. Of course the most obvious answer... by SeaFox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Stop fawning over Firefox so much and develop the projects more equally" isn't even mentioned.

    It's just a case of glory seekers. From the Mozillazine forums/Bugzilla, it appears MScott is pretty much the only truly dedicated developer of Thunderbird. It's not as "sexy" as Firefox, so people want to contribute to the browser instead. Firefox has brand recognition to almost make it a household name like IE is now. Thunderbird, not nearly so much.

  13. Another wake up call... by mmcguigan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If anyone is surprised by this move, they weren't paying attention.

    MoFo/MoCo are owned in a serious financial way by Google. Remember the Mozilla Suite was dumped in a similar, though worse, manner just a few years ago when Google poored money all over the cash strapped Mozilla that AOL left behind. Google wasn't interested in financing the suite. Google probably stipulates that their financing only go to Firefox development, where Google is front and center in the users face. Google isn't likely to help finance a mail client where they don't see any return on investment. Google wants you to use Gmail for the ads.

    The funds Mozilla had before the Google deal were likely diverted from the suite to Thunderbird and other applications. Mozilla has likely exhausted those funds now. Thunderbird developers should join the SeaMonkey community. Together the community and the projects might survive this.

    Future prediction of a friend: When the government cracks down on MoFo's shady tax history, MoFo will go under and Google will likely buy MoCo and spin it as if they saved Mozilla.

    http://www.scroogle.org/mozilla.html

  14. Inability To Manage a Product Line by RonBurk · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just like closed-source, for-profit orgs. OSS is really growing up! :-)

  15. gmail by MobyDisk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thunderbird has to compete with not only client-side apps like Outlook and Eudora, but also webmail packages, which are becoming very sophisticated thanks to AJAX. Years ago, webmail sucked - limited space, no search ability, etc. But now it is really good, and I'm finding I envy my colleagues who don't need Remote Desktop to check their email. I even wonder if POP3's future is looking grim.

  16. Re:Geez by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, smooth syncing with my cell phone is pushing me back to Outlook. Firefox has really overcome almost all compatibility hurdles - Thunderbird (particularly the address book and calendaring bits) not so much. Also, Thunderbird still seems to get confused about offline copies.

    Ultimately, I just wonder if it has enough developer person-hours to compete with Outlook. Firefox definitely does.

  17. OpenGroupware + Thunderbird + Lightning + plugins by Pav · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The pieces are JUST starting to come together re: replacing MS Exchange... although, granted, it's still VERY alpha/beta it's quite an exciting development.

        OpenGroupware (nightly builds) support CalDAV, and Thunderbird /w Lightning talks to it. There are other Thunderbird plugins which use GroupDAV for shared address lists and free/busy information through the OpenGroupware server.

        This works today(!), though it's non-trivial to set up, and you have to be careful about versions. The combination to use is Lightning 0.3.1, the latest Thunderbird, OpenGroupware nightly, and the latest GroupDAV free/busy and shared address lists plugins. Unfortunately the latest Sunbird/Lightning (0.5) doesn't work right now, but bugs have been filed and the developers understand the problem... and a fix will happen in time.

        OK, it's less functional and robust compared to the dominant player... but it's cheaper.

  18. Has Mozilla forgotten their mission ? by neurocutie · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From the Mozilla.org website:

    The Mozilla Foundation was established in July 2003 as a California not-for-profit corporation dedicated to the public benefit.
    ...
    There are many different ways of advancing the principles of the Mozilla Manifesto. We welcome a broad range of activities, and anticipate the same creativity that Mozilla participants have shown in other areas of the project.
    It seems that in focussing on Firefox, Mozilla is forgeting the whole point of their existence. It is a dangerous path...

    - They are becoming beholden to Google and a single project (Firefox). We don't need another Opera (nothing wrong with Opera per se), or another browser created by yet another software company. OSS is supposed to be a *different* business model, with a *broader* vision, benefitting the public, not just Google proxies or lackies.

    -It would seem that they endanger their status as a 501c3 public charity/foundation, and thus their tax-exempt status. IIRC, a 501c3 cannot accept more than 10% of their funding from any one source. At the moment Mozilla is rapidly looking like they are doing coding for hire (Firefox for Google).

    - Pushing Thunderbird forward *within* Mozilla would at least maintain some sense that 1) they are promulgating a broader mission, 2) they are doing more than what Google asks them to.

    - If Google's funding is truly earmarked for Firefox (as suggested in this thread), Mozilla should end that right now, and stipulate to Google that at least some reasonable fraction of their "donation" (e.g. 30%) MUST be in the form of an "unrestricted grant", that could and will be use for other projects in the foundation, like Thunderbird.

    Mozilla is nuts for focusing on Firefox at the expense of Thunderbird. They are losing sight of their entire unique contribution to the community, and their larger mission.

    Email is an essential function of the Internet and modern computing. If Thunderbird isn't doing so well, Mozilla should be fixing the problem and addressing those issues head-on, rather than jettisoning and punting on it.

  19. Doesn't it seem like...? by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Doesn't it seem like Mozilla goes through these cycles, where they add the kitchen sink, then they realize "Oh no, we're this bloated piece of crap" and so they divest themselves and try to go "back to basics", only to begin the cycle all over again?

    1. Re:Doesn't it seem like...? by itlurksbeneath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And who's fault is that? The user community. They crave a lean and mean application that's just the basics. Then they want more and more features with every release until they realize "this thing is a bloated piece of crap", demand a leaner, meaner application then the cycle starts again.

      --
      Have you ever considered piracy? You'd make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts.