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Eudora

 

A popular full-featured Internet mail program (mail client) from QUALCOMM for Windows and Mac. Eudora was available in light, sponsored and paid versions www.eudora.com) and, in the early days of the Internet, was often bundled with computers and ISP startup packages.

Eudora was developed by Steve Dorner at the University of Illinois and was first released as freeware for the Macintosh in 1988. It was the first graphics-based mail program that became popular. Later ported to Windows, in time, more than 20 million people would use the product.

From Eudora to Penelope

In 2006, QUALCOMM announced it would no longer offer Eudora after April 2007. However, Eudora lives on in the Penelope open source project at the Mozilla Foundation. Penelope is based on the Mozilla Thunderbird e-mail client, but enhanced with Eudora features so that Eudora users can migrate to Penelope without losing the functionality they are comfortable with. For more information, visit www.mozilla.org. See Thunderbird.

Eudora Was a Pulitzer Prize Winner

The software was named after Eudora Welty (1909-2001), an American novelist and Pulitzer Prize winner who, along with such greats as William Faulkner and Tennessee Williams, created a Southern literary renaissance in the U.S. from the 1930s to the 1950s. One of Miss Welty's short stories, "Why I Live at the P.O.," was a tale about a woman who lived at the post office instead of at home. It inspired Dorner, who was spending so much time programming a mail application. See stationery.

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Wikipedia: Eudora (e-mail client)
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Eudora
Developer(s) Qualcomm
Stable release 7.1 (Windows), 6.2.4 (Mac OS) / October 11, 2006
Preview release 8.0.0 Beta 7 / September 5, 2009
Operating system Windows, Mac OS, Mac OS X, Linux[1]
Type E-mail
License Adware, payware, Light;
Free software (Eudora 8.0+/Penelope)
Website http://www.eudora.com

Eudora is an e-mail client used on the Apple Macintosh and Microsoft Windows operating systems. It also supports several palmtop computing platforms, including Newton and the Palm OS. The software was named after Eudora Welty because of her short story "Why I Live at the P.O." [2] Eudora was developed by Steve Dorner in 1988 who worked at the Computer Services Organization of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign[3]. Eudora was acquired by Qualcomm in 1991. In 2006 Qualcomm stopped development of the commercial version, and sponsored the creation of a new open-source version based on Mozilla Thunderbird code-named Penelope.

Contents

History

Originally distributed freely, Eudora was commercialized and offered in a Light (freeware) and Pro (commercial) product. Between 2003 and 2006, the fully featured Pro version was also available as a "Sponsored mode" (adware) distribution.

Eudora (6.0.1) added support for Bayesian filtering of spam with a feature called SpamWatch. Eudora (6.2) added a scam watch feature that flags suspicious links within e-mails in an attempt to thwart phishing. Eudora (7.0) added Ultra-Fast Search, which finds any emails using single or multiple criteria in seconds.

Eudora has support for 'Stationery', a standard message or reply prepared ahead of time to a common question. Eudora stores e-mails in the mbox format, which uses plain text files instead of a database as Microsoft Outlook does. This allows the user to back up portions of their e-mail correspondence without backing up the entire database.

Eudora supports the POP3, IMAP and SMTP protocols. Eudora also has support for SSL and, in Windows, S/MIME authentication, allowing users to sign or encrypt email communications for greatest security.

Eudora is noteworthy for its extensive variety of settings to customize its behavior, many of which are not available in the user interface but are accessed using numbered "x-eudora-setting" URIs that must be pasted into a message and clicked.[4]

At one time, Eudora also offered a webmail version at eudoramail.com. This service was run by Lycos as part of Mailcity, later renamed Lycos Mail. As of 2006, Eudoramail addresses for users still work (and are redirected to Lycos Mail accounts), but new users cannot sign up for the service.

Successors

On October 11, 2006, Qualcomm announced [5] that future versions of Eudora would be based on the same technology platform as Mozilla Thunderbird and be open source. The codename for this project is "Penelope" [6]. Penelope is developed by the Mozilla Foundation, and the project is being led by the former Qualcomm team, including original developer Steve Dorner.

Penelope is available as an extension to Mozilla Thunderbird. The Paid mode commercial version of Eudora is no longer available as of May 1st, 2007. The Light/Sponsored mode versions of Eudora continue to be available for download.

On July 19, 2007 the developers announced the first official Beta build (called Eudora 8.0.0b1), and published a roadmap of the planned progress[7]. The project is still in beta stage.[8]

The new Thunderbird-based open-source versions of Eudora does not retain the original mbox data structure, which stores all attachments as individual files, together in one folder. No software is currently developed/supported that can access old Eudora mail archives directly, without import/conversion.

A third party, Infinity Data Systems, is also developing a client designed specifically to mimic Eudora's functionality completely from scratch. Originally titled Odysseus, it is now called MailForge.

References

See also

External links


 
 

 

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