Episode: 3308 Title: HPR3308: let's talk about Thunderbird Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3308/hpr3308.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-24 20:33:22 --- This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3308 for Wednesday, the 7th of April 2021. Today's show is entitled Let's Talk About Thunderbird. It is hosted by some guy on the internet and is about 33 minutes long and carries a clean flag. The summary is using Thunderbird to manage emails. This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com. Hello ladies and gentlemen and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio. I am your host, some guy on the internet and today I'm going to talk to you guys about email. At the end of my or not at the end of the last episode but somewhere in the show notes I think I probably said I do a video on email or not a video podcast on email and you know when you say you're going to do a show you got to provide a show. So here we go we're providing a show on email. Now obviously I'm not a highly technical person but I do believe I've got some things that might help some people and even if it doesn't if these are things you automatically know how to do or whatever then I guess just enjoy the show you know it's content and that's what we're here for so let's get started. So first thing first the program I use to manage email is Thunderbird. So if you're doing email in the browser and you'd like to you know use a program to manage your email where that way you can you know manage it offline you don't always have to have the internet to you know go through all your emails or whatever I recommend Thunderbird it's really good it's free and open source software I made a donation to them not too long ago I think like 20 bucks I got to make another donation to them as well because I like to keep projects like this around I mean that you know I know my little 20 bucks is nothing compared to what some major organization may provide but that's that's that's still appreciation coming from the users you know showing that look we need this software and I'm gonna keep keep showing that I need this software so I'm gonna make another more than like this can be another 20 bucks that I donate until I can actually get financially stable enough to do like an automatic recurring payment thing I really in my last episode I talked about that account thing where we just sort of you know make a one donation and the money is automatically I wish that would be a little bit easier crap now here I go rambling on about something completely the usual huh let's all right let's stay focused so once you got your Thunderbird loaded up and you got your your accounts loaded into Thunderbird you know you get a login to your accounts verify that it choose set up to if you want to anyway keep your password stored so that way automatically when you load Thunderbird automatically pulls down new emails and things and you don't have to login each and every time so I have multiple email accounts under Thunderbird and one of the things I thought of in the past to do to help cut down on some of the spam because like when you're shopping at different stores and things they all want you to provide an email address and you know tons of spam I was gonna create an email address specifically for the spam to get dumped into and I saw that one of my accounts under Yahoo has this capability for you to it it's kind of weird setting that up where you can have like this sort of temporary email account that you create under your main email account and that temporary one is what you give out whenever you know what's gonna be a bunch of like if a store has hey which like without email you give them that one instead of your main but what I find is once you start using Thunderbird appropriately there's no need for any of that there there really isn't I mean Thunderbird just handles it all for you I mean you can do the smart filtering which will automatically detect certain emails as spam for you and move them to the bulk email and you can work with that so that over time it gets smarter and smarter and automatically detects the spam or you can do like I do and just work with filters I like to manually do it myself personally I like to go on there and select the thing I really know as spam and you know copy that address put it into a filter have that filter automatically before the junk processing automatically pull anything from that domain and I just highlight the domains not just the specific address sometimes it's this specific address depending on where it's coming from but yeah I like the domain in the filter and then have that domain automatically dumped into the bulk mail I guess folder directory whatever it is here and I like to do that instead of deleting it immediately because sometimes errors may and I like the idea that I can go back and check through bulk mail and ensure that okay I did not accidentally put something in there that I really need it so bulk mail is like that you know last chance before it's deleted forever so yeah that's that's what I do for that now setting up your filters you're gonna probably is some of you may not know how to do this let's go ahead and click on this bad boy right here once you got your email logged in and your emails are pulling down or whatever you want to set up a filter you can just hit old on the keyboard now to pull up your menu bar at the top if you don't already have that because depending like if you using a bunch to it may not have the menu at the top you'll just have the hamburger menu which is on the top right the three little lines if you don't know what a hamburger menu is it like three horizontal lines stacked on top of each other but if you hit old it'll pull up your menu with the file edit view etc I'm on Linux meant sentiment this is my production machine that I'm on I'm not on the laptop that I did show about a few weeks back but here we go let's go ahead and jump on in here we're gonna click on tools and then we're gonna screw down to message filters so if you wanted to you can hit old that'll pull up the menu then you can hit T which is has the little underscore under T showing you with the hot keys that you can hit there and then you can hit F I should have probably did the NATO alphabet thing so old T is in tango F as in fox trot and that'll pull up your tools menu so now that you've got your tools menu up you can go ahead and just hit new to create a new filter and when you do that I'm not going to create a new one right now and I'm just going to go under one of my existing ones but when you create a new one another window will pop up and you can give it a name for the filter name so right now I'm under my delete all filter and this is a dangerous one by the way you're going to see some options in there now the options that I'm looking at right now right under the name that you would give for your filter you'd see the little message the label that says was that apply filter when I have manually run selected I also have getting new mail and right beside that it gives the option for you to select something and the option I have selected is filter before junk classification so that's I have those two check which is manually run and getting new mail now beneath that they have archiving after sending empirically every 10 minutes those are not checked those are the check boxes now down at the bottom you're going to see a couple of radio buttons down there those are the circular buttons not the square buttons so you're going to see match all of the following I don't use that one and I'll tell you why I'm just a bit here the one I use is match any of the following and that's key there not match all match any of the following and then there's match all messages and I don't use that one either I use match any of the following and in the bottom when I'm going to add a thing to filter so you'd see like a little plus button on the right over there I have from as the first option the first thing that you want to begin matching any of the following so we're going to do from which is who the who it's coming from the message is coming from then our second option is it must contain so basically from x person containing x statement or x strength whatever and now the string is the third field that that I basically just put a domain in there and the domains that I put into the delete all filter political ads that come in so you know every year is going to be political ads and tons and tons about like I know with these particular things I'm never going to come back and and I don't want to view them I don't want to do anything with them I just want them to go away permanently and I every time I get a political ad that comes in I edit my delete all filter that I have set up and I just come in and I just dump the domain in there now what I mean by the domain domain you'll get an email address that say John Doe at politics.com right I delete the part of the string that has John Doe or John Doe and I keep the part of the string which is at politics.com now by just putting the at politics.com it doesn't matter if it's John Doe, Jane Doe, Bill Doe, Greg Doe it doesn't matter who it is from that domain that sends me a message if it comes from that domain it's going to be automatically deleted that's what this filter is designed for now at the bottom down there you'll see perform these actions and that's where I have you know you can select like move message 2 and it'll give you folder options where you want to move message 2 you can have markets red tag the message set junk status ignore you know I have delete message now this is a very powerful one and you really want to be careful because there is no coming back when you do that so if you accidentally copied like you know an important email address that sends you like invoices or something like that yeah you're going to be in trouble so be careful using that one I like it just mainly for the politics and whenever all those political messages and things come in just automatically copy them and put them right in there and yeah they just automatically get deleted now the reason I have something like that is because whenever the people who are sending you these phishing emails and things of that nature normally they are going to try and mimic like a star or something like that but sometimes they will just mimic whatever they think you'll click on and what you'll notice is if you view your emails like I view them which is in plain text now I'm going to let me tell you how to get to the plain text thing real quick first if you click on the message tab so you can hit old and it'll pull up the message tab oh excuse me excuse me it's not the message tab I believe it's view yeah so you hit old and you can hit V I don't know what the natal thing is for V so but just click on view and you V is in view there you go and then you can hit B as in body which is it will select the message body as menu and then you can go down to plain text there's three options and it is original text I mean there's original HTML simple HTML and plain text I always use plain text except for when I'm printing certain things not printing to paper but printing to PDF for archiving in my own personal way that's when I use original HTML but other than that I normally when I'm just viewing all emails I do plain text and what you'll notice when you do that is when those phishing emails come in those scammers or whoever they are the image the original HTML of that email will look like it comes from let's just say Amazon it'll look exactly like it comes from Amazon they'll have the appropriate images it'll be designed to look like it's from Amazon but when you view it as plain text you'll notice that it'll just be links no images and it'll just be like the text included in the actual thing if there is any text they may embed all the text onto an image and then you know send you that image so you'll notice that it's just a couple of links in there and the links aren't in aren't from Amazon they don't go to Amazon or anything so you know it's just a scam so basically you know plain text is a security measure that allows you to just basically see and read your email now what I wish they would do I wish there was a feature in here where you could turn off links where you could not possibly click on the link like it would just be literally plain text not not a actual hyperlink in there you know so if there's a link that you wanted to click on maybe you can enable that feature to make links clickable but I would like it where it just links aren't clickable at all what I do whenever I'm reviewing a certain email that appears to be somewhat suspicious and I'm not sure if those links are real or not so I'm reviewing this email right we're just going to create a quick scenario here I'm reviewing this email I'm not sure if these links are real I'm viewing it in plain text I'm going to go right over here on the you'll see like a button is there there'll be several buttons first of all depending on the layout you're using I think I'm using vertical let me check really quickly let me click on the hamburger menu because that's how I normally get to it and then we go down to is it customized uh-huh we click on customize and then there will be layout and I am currently using the classic view layout and I have my folder pane and my message pane so that's the layout I'm using right now and you'll see when you're opening a message the message will be at the bottom with the list of emails in your inbox or whatever folder you're looking at will be at the top so I'm looking at the buttons above the email to have reply forward archive jump delete and more if you click on the option more then you can save the email as a different format which I just save it as a plain text file or you can print it to a PDF file and that way you can view it the same way it looks in the email as a PDF file but the link will not be clickable that's the main reason why I do it and I exported as a text file mainly so that I can examine that link I can copy that link go to a certain site that I feel like um but there's certain sites out there like if you get with Northern Antivirus they have their site checker and I'll copy that link go over to Norton dump it in there and just let them give me some sort of feedback on that that link so that way if I'm not sure if that's the real deal or not you know that just ways I try to verify what the hell I'm looking at looks real enough but just in case I'm wrong let me try and figure out what's going on here without actually accidentally clicking on the link and sometimes the reason why I wish there was a setting to turn the links off I don't often check my email when I'm holding my daughter because she likes to reach a slap on the keyboard and just I mean when she gets tired of being in my arm she'll start to wiggle and move around and I might accidentally click on something and I become furious when that happened you know I don't want her to believe that I'm angry at her but I really don't want to click on a fishing link or anything so it's like you know if if there was a setting where I could just turn off all links they're no longer clickable at all or if it was like an um I think in Libre office if you wanted to actually click on the link and open it in a browser you had to hold down control then click the link I think Libre office is the program thinking of that does that so you can hold down control then click on the link and it will actually open the versus the link just opening up when you click on it so I wish there were measures like that in there maybe I can probably send that in as a feature request or something but um yeah I'll take I'll take a look at that but those are just some measures that I used to try and reduce the off chance that I would probably click on something terrible you know I can investigate certain things by using plain text and then you know exporting that message to a plain text a document so the links aren't active then I can safely copy and examine those links from a plain text while I mean from a plain text editor like you know I'm I'm using Z here on or Visual Studio Codium but I prefer Z because Z doesn't do any sort of links at all Visual Studio Codium will actually provide a link in there but I mean you don't necessarily click on the link in there but I still just like Z because it's super simple you're not clicking on the link in Z so that's why I use it I mean you can use them too I mean either them nano whatever you want to use yeah you know just view your links you can investigate them further so make sure that everything safe and only up and up also one of the things I do is I use the Ubuntu font because it has the least amount of duplicate character models you know the indistinguishable character models where the one looks exactly like the lowercase L and that also looks exactly like the uppercase I you know what I mean the the character data is different but the actual character model is just this bar so they're they're just the copy and paste of the model across all three characters yeah I don't use fonts like that the Ubuntu font has from what I could find no duplicate characters like that so that's why I use that font now I do wish that the I like the capital I would have serifs I'm glad that they put a serif on the lowercase I guess the car serif right the little things on the letter whatever they're called um the lowercase L does have sort of like a bend at the top and the bend at the bottom to distinguish it from like say an uppercase I the uppercase I into Ubuntu font is just a single bar a horizontal I mean a vertical bar so let's continue on I guess I got a few more things I can share with you now one of the things I'm transitioning to now with my email strategy is I have a bunch of folders in my email thing right so you know you got your inbox you drive your sent your archive bulk etc and then you have all the folders that you create so I have like my finances folder my invoices folder just several other folders in there and what I'm doing is setting up filters to automatically filter out certain emails into those folders and ultimately what I want to do is everything that I want to keep say if it's a certain invoice that the of a large purchase or whatever I'm going to definitely archive that you know print it out to a PDF file and save the actual email file and that way I can archive those onto my backup solutions that I have and then if anything were to happen to the message in my email doesn't matter because I still have it backed up offsite you know I mean not offsite but off onto other disks and things what I want to do is eventually start filtering out everything from the inbox so all the mail will come into the inbox is just going to literally be an intake once the mail comes into the inbox it'll automatically be introduced to all of the different filters I have that takes certain things moving to the work folder personal folders all that good stuff then I'll have a chance to just give a quick eyeball over the the inbox you know see everything that's left in there if there's something that I missed maybe emails like say from my bank right my bank may send me a your account statement is is ready you know so because I do paperless for as much things as I can so they'll say hey you know your your account thing is ready you can go online and view it now that's not necessarily it's literally something I want to backup or even keep I'm glad to have that message don't get me wrong but it's not something so important that I want to archive it so it's fine that can sit in there I don't need to actually set up a filter for that but if it was your for your refund was posted or whatever okay I'll probably back that up you know a refund or whatever especially if it's an of a certain amount of money I'll make sure to keep that now everything else that's in there I can just eyeball it in at the end of the month so right now we're in March at the end of March what I'll do is I'll give it one last eyeball just glance over real quick and everything that just looks like yeah I mean it has some importance by not enough to keep move it all over to the bulk and that way my inbox is fresh every single month and the bulk just builds up all of this crap and and say like at the end of about six months or so I can go check out the bulk real quick yep yep all that stuff in the bulk looks like stuff I don't want to keep it was important for the time that I had it but truthfully it's not something I want to backup and keep so empty bulk you know you can right click on your bulk and you see empty junk click on empty junk boom all of it goes away just don't dump it all in trash delete and then hey next couple of months just keep running that technique over and over again and as new things that I signed up for like recently I went on humble bundle and I thought I bought a bunch of HTML books turns out those were courses I should have read that bundle and I have a massive humble bundle library I call it my humble library because that's that's what it is I just have tons and tons of digital books most of which I'm never going to get to but I feel like if I had the time I would love to get to them so yeah so yeah I thought I was getting a bunch of HTML books I really wanted it for the CSS because I was going to learn a little bit more about CSS to finish tricking out my Linux meant Cinnamon environment the the Cinnamon theme files are written with CSS so I wanted just kind of brush up on that and make sure I know what I was doing and turns out those were courses though so I had to sign up for this damn course and so now that's an email I'm going to have to add to a filter to to move into a certain folder or whatever but yeah as things like that happen in the future even for certain sites that like say we do couponing as well when certain coupons come and I have a folder for that and then by the boom by the bang you know stuff I want to keep goes into the important folders and everything else just sits in the inbox until it's moved over to bulk and every month I get a fresh inbox so there's less to worry about and more easy wonderful emailing to deal with now one of the good things about Thunderbird that I also like excuse me clear my throat here there we go yeah one of the other things I like about Thunderbird as well as the calendar is really nice in here I've I've saw unread it a lot of people were complaining oh I want a more modern looking email client you know something more modern for me personally it's all about being able to get my work done that's the best program in the world where I can sit down and get my work done without worrying about configuring a million different things spending hours tweaking and all that I can sit down and get my work done and I get a dark mode best program in the world here's here's my money you know take my money so yeah I'm really really loving Thunderbird the calendar is really nice I mean as there there are some small little glitches that occur with it from time to time but they say that they're rebuilding the calendar so I'm being a little careful with all the different things that I'm adding to the calendar because I'm a big proponent of land I want to host as many services on my land as possible and on Linux Mint we have this thing called warpinator so basically what I do all of our computers run Linux Mint in here right I'll have warpinator setup and my calendar folder cat file I can export from my main system to the what do you call it Thunderbird calendar file whatever they call it and then using Linux Mint's warpinator I can then share that file with my other PCs on the network on the land and then update the calendars on every PC so my main system I have multiple monitors big they're 24 inch monitors and I can just sit down and work nice and comfortably here and then export over to the laptops and even share like an under the calendar tab I'll have multiple calendars and I get the home calendar for all of the stuff that happens in the house as far as bills and things of that nature I have the work calendar where I use to manage hours I have the hacker public radio calendar where I try to manage where I'm going to put out an episode in the research that I'm doing for that episode where I can store into that calendar you know here's a site that I was checking up on back and go back and just you know all the small things that I want to do multiple different I even have a calendar specifically for my daughter in there and the reason why I separate them like that is because I can export what I want out to share with say my wife or you know whatever whoever I can just export that out and just say here you go update your calendar with this and now we can all be on the same page and it's not only internet I don't have to worry about anybody hacking into that or anything like I got to clean my throat again pardon me yes excuse me I don't have to worry about anybody hacking into our you know calendar seeing all our personal information or anything like that and of course I don't store anything like SSN numbers or anything like that is but still my my calendar is my private thing I also do the handwritten agendas which I love that's how I once I got into those oh my god it kept me from double booking things and I was actually able to just mmm so good love them I used to see it big models from Walmart those really nice but I'm enough of that we're talking about Thunderbird and of course my throat's going out again all right so yeah once once you get into it and start learning about the calendar setting up all your multiple calendars and then you can you can activate which calendar you want to see at what time so when you get into those busy months things kind of get a little clustered all over the screen with the different calendars you have on there but you can just take off the ones you don't want to see at the moment and it's really nice the event schedulers really nice as well because you can add your your your people from your address book to the events and then they'll get them an email you know letting them know that they've been added and all that kind of stuff's really cool so yeah I think that's about it for the Thunderbird thing I'm trying to think of there's anything else I know as soon as I'm on my way to work I'm gonna think oh my god I forgot to tell them about this but yeah it's it's a wonderful program I add in the SS the RSS feeds into Thunderbird as well I manage as much messaging as possible in Thunderbird and I guess what I could ramble off on just for a little while is the Unix philosophy I know that there are a lot of people who use the Unix philosophy to an extreme like there I guess their belief is Thunderbird shouldn't have all these different things in it like the say the calendar with the event list and the RSS feed knowledge at into one program and I also love the address book in Thunderbird is what the address book is wonderful I took the time to take a bunch of businesses that I communicate with and just updated their information in the address book like just really filling it out wonderful I wish I could export that to like a CSV file or whatever and put on my iPhone but iPhone is a pain in the ass so I'm really really hoping our Linux alternatives are speedily coming along and I'm really looking forward to getting something like a pine phone someday and just having that as my actual phone that would be oh it'll be a dream but right now we gotta do we gotta do so back to Thunderbird I really don't I really don't care about the Unix philosophy that much I've been doing some research on that and I'm gonna probably do an episode on that as well crap now I'm already I'm already bound to it now but I was I was doing some research on it and the the thing I was wondering is like okay well everything's called ganu here and my understanding of ganu is ganu not Unix so if we if we're making clear that this is ganu not Unix meaning not containing any Unix code or whatever our understanding of the Unix philosophy main I mean it's a wonderful philosophy when I read through some of the different points I think it's like 19 points about making you know modular code that is reusable and everything like that it's seeing the bit I don't know it's it's a nice idea I just don't know how anybody is actually gonna be but because I'm not a programmer is why I don't know right if I was a programming maybe maybe this will make much more sense to me but I just don't see it working in today's environment where programs are very robust you know these programs are wonderful they're they filled with all sorts of features and everything and they're just great I don't see anybody wanting to deal with extensions look at ganu has ganu unfair to well using the extension system you get what I'm saying every person I know they uses ganu pretty much hates the extension system they want a lot of features to be built in and maintained but then ganu but when you have to use the extensions what happens is the ganome gets updated but the extensions don't therefore your workflow suffers until the people who are doing the extensions get caught up and they don't work for Fedora or Ganoma whoever so they're probably just members of the community that create on their own time so there's going to be lag in that update which means your workflow suffers until I just don't see that as a as a thing so the Unix philosophy to me it may just be my flawed understanding but I think it should be used very sparingly in ganu you know I'm gonna stand firmly on the ganu not Unix thing and I'm gonna do some more research and try to get a better episode out about that so enough rambling on all the great wonderful aspects of open source software free and open source software shot out to a hookah as well oh god I gotta give a hookah thank you very much man you're wonderful you're awesome I listened to that episode the other day about batch processing with audacity and I was thinking of myself the other day this gotta be some way they they're gonna make this a little easier but I just don't have the time to go search and for every I'm trying to prepare shows I'm doing my work I'm catching up on all my agendas and everything if they feel turned out all these emails with this wonderful program Thunderbird gotta set up time to go ahead and do another donation to Thunderbird lots and lots of good stuff as well as download my humble books that I just bought and finding out that there was uh that one issue where the HTML things were actually courses and out bookings yeah that one because I'm I definitely don't have time to actually do the courses but hey whatever yeah a hookah put that that message out there uh that that show saying hey you can batch process this is how you do it and here's a link to a video where I eventually learn and I thought I just love this community hands up give yourself a pat on the back I applaud you all for your efforts it's wonderful and you put up with me in my rambling so I guess that means there's a there's a in a ward in life somewhere for you just just get your put up with me so I thank you all and um that concludes our episode done up for my rambling enjoy your day you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is hecka public radio was found by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website or record a follow up episode yourself unless otherwise status today's show is released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license