Chapter 6. E-Mailing and Web Browsing
IN THIS CHAPTER
Reading e-mail with Thunderbird Mail
Managing e-mail in Evolution
Using text-based e-mail clients
Browsing the Web with Firefox
Browsing with SeaMonkey
Using text-based Web browsers
Web browsers and e-mail clients available with Linux have seen incredible improvements over the past few years. Their features rival those you can get on the most popular Windows clients. Security issues with Outlook mail clients and Internet Explorer browsers have many people taking a fresh look at Linux and open source software for accessing the Internet.
This chapter describes some of the best Web, e-mail, chat, and related tools for accessing the Internet that you can get with the Linux distributions described with this book. If you have never worked with the Internet from Linux, or haven't for a few years, you might be blown away by what's available today.
Using E-Mail
Any Linux desktop system worth the name desktop system will have at least one or two applications for sending, receiving, and working with your personal e-mail. Many users believe that superior tools for managing spam and generally better security mechanisms make Linux a great desktop platform for managing your e-mail.
Choosing an e-mail client
Choices of e-mail clients range from those that look like clones of popular Windows e-mail programs to those that run in plain text from the shell. Interfaces vary widely with the e-mail clients that are available with Linux. Here are some different ...
Get Linux Bible® 2010 Edition: Boot Up to Ubuntu®, Fedora®, KNOPPIX, Debian®, openSUSE®, and 13 Other Distributions now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.