- #THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 HOW TO#
- #THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 MAC OS X#
- #THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 ARCHIVE#
- #THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 PASSWORD#
#THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 ARCHIVE#
#THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 PASSWORD#
Now all you need to provide is your name, email address, and password and the new email account set up wizard will check our database and find the email settings for you.
![thunderbird for mac 10.5.8 thunderbird for mac 10.5.8](https://www.enterprise.com.al/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/thunderbird-linux.jpg)
If I could simply trash all the threads with an obvious junk subject line (and I know a lot of them! ), I could save almost half the work.
![thunderbird for mac 10.5.8 thunderbird for mac 10.5.8](https://www.freelist.gr/pics/1/AVID-M-AUDIO-FAST-TRACK--190725151722-885.jpeg)
The “junk” issue comes up because, since I can’t rely on the message being what the one-liner says it is, I have to read all 22,000 messages I imported in order to assess which threads really are junk.
#THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 HOW TO#
I can’t rely on the message actually belonging in the thread, the way most of the apparent interlopers do.Īlso, I don’t know how to manually change the wrongly displayed subject and sender so that they correspond to the subject and sender of the message that is actually displayed when the line in the top panel is clicked… Sometimes an apparent interloper is a real interloper. Making matters worse, it’s not always true that the actual message belongs in the thread when the messages organized by thread contain an apparent interloper. The actual message belongs in the thread, and the reported header and sender belong to a different message entirely. It’s about why the top panel of a set organized by thread says a message has one subject and a given sender, when the actual message you see when you click on it has a different subject and sender. My question isn’t really about junk filtering. Is this a known problem that I should do something to fix, or have I simply done something silly? Or, is it a bug (I hope that’s not the answer). I attach a screenshot of an example, showing a selected message that belongs in the thread called “Control” in the left column listing (not shown), though the displayed subject line is from a quite different message thread. But on looking at the actual messages, I found that many, but not all, of the odd messages actually did belong in the thread. I noticed that some of them had more than one sender and subject line, so shouldn’t be part of the thread. I started to delete the “Junk” threads, but I had to look at some of them to determine whether they were junk.
![thunderbird for mac 10.5.8 thunderbird for mac 10.5.8](http://treasureclever296.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/6/7/126721710/790037670.jpg)
![thunderbird for mac 10.5.8 thunderbird for mac 10.5.8](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0304/6886/6179/products/B21B5C0B-90EE-4F57-9D66-7694902B631C_1600x.jpg)
There were over 22000 messages, most of them Junk (which Thunderbird had previously identified as Junk, so I don’t know why they were in “Inbox” in the first place). I couldn’t get DTP Office to recognize any mail folder, so I started to do it mailbox by mailbox (File>Import>Email… select “Inbox” and group by thread). It is in several accounts, with a 4-level deep folder hierarchy in one of the accounts.
#THUNDERBIRD FOR MAC 10.5.8 MAC OS X#
With a newly installed DTP Office 2.0pb8 on Mac OS X 10.5.8, I am trying to import Mail from Thunderbird.