tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12948038.post112525383135523332..comments2023-07-29T09:15:17.416+01:00Comments on allan's blog - Agile & Digital Business: Why blog so much? - the importance feed backallan kellyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06262139490250478379noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12948038.post-1125790085577291822005-09-04T00:28:00.000+01:002005-09-04T00:28:00.000+01:00It's odd that you should mention Thunderbird, sinc...It's odd that you should mention Thunderbird, since I'm just about to switch away from it. I started using it not long after I discovered I liked Firefox, but have always felt it somehow awkward: the RSS features are nice, but I don't get the benefit of a browser environment, such as a larger viewing window, the browser history to show visited links, tabbed navigation for pages opened from links, browser extensions, etc. It's more 'Web 0.5' than 'Web 2.0' :-) If you haven't tried a browser-based RSS reader, I'd encourage you to make the comparison.<BR/><BR/>As for Thunderbird, those aren't the only reasons I'm moving from it. I've lost data to Thunderbird's 2GB limit and there are lots of little annoyances such as no apparent way to default to plain-text messages while having the option of HTML. The interface is slow and never quite organises itself the way I'd like it to, it's a nuisance to merge profiles, the threading support is lacking, etc.<BR/><BR/>I only recently realised that I actually manage all my e-mail with Outlook on my work machine via Terminal Services over a VPN. I wonder what my employer's privacy policy has to say about that?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com