
Fix for missing folders or empty folder panel after updating to Thunderbird 3.0.2. Shipped with equivalent fixes to Firefox 2.0.0.20. Replacement for Thunderbird 2.0.0.15 which was officially abandoned on 27 June 2008. Includes fixes that would have been part of Thunderbird 2.0.0.13 which was officially abandoned on 14 April 2008. Afrikaans and Ukrainian locales were added. Windows Vista support, message tags, new visual theme, improved extension support, improved new email notifications, folder summary pop-ups, find text in messages search tool, new Windows installer, easy access to popular email services, advanced folder views, session history navigation, and saved search folder performance. Improved performance in saved search folders. Updates to the extension system to provide enhanced security and to allow for easier localization of extensions. New combined and improved Add-ons manager for extensions and themes. New Windows installer based on Nullsoft Scriptable Install System. End-of-life 1.5.0.x product lineįirst Thunderbird 2 alpha release. Native support for Intel-based Macintosh computers by shipping universal binary. Second Thunderbird 1.5 release candidate. Improvements to automated update system, website rendering and performance. Stability improvement and security fixes. End-of-life 1.0.x product lineįirst Thunderbird 1.1 alpha release. Improved Privacy Controls, Global Inbox, RSS/ Atom Integration, Improved data migration. Smaller download size, improved IMAP support, updated extension and theme managers. Pinstripe theme for Mac OS X, Windows installer, better junk mail handling, IMAP IDLE and LDAP version 3 support. Release historyĬurrent supported release Thunderbird 102.8.0 In 2004, together with the change of Firefox's visual identity by Jon Hicks, a more professional logo that is currently in use was introduced. The original Thunderbird logo was just a modified Firebird logo, with a simple shifting of hue value from red to blue. This contrasted with the previous all-in-one approach, hopefully leading to more efficient and maintainable code, as well as allowing users to mix and match the Mozilla applications with alternatives. Significant work on Thunderbird restarted with the announcement that from version 1.5 onwards the main Mozilla suite would be designed around separate applications using this then new toolkit. Logos used during the development of Thunderbird
