Tuesday, October 11, 2011

SeaMonkey 2.4.1-Web-browser, advanced email, IRC chat and more from Mozilla

Firefox is of course Mozilla's big success story but the Mozilla Foundation
do a lot more than web browsers. The unusually named SeaMonkey is a Mozilla
product which has lofty ambitions - to be a web browser, advanced email,
newsgroup and feed client, IRC chat, and HTML editor in one. If this sounds a
bit much to pull of well you'd be right. SeaMonkey is a bit of an outdated
concept nowadays and it's no surprise that it carried on the work that
Netscape started many years ago. It's a lot to get right in one go but this
latest release sees SeaMonkey finally brought up to date for the demands of
internet users today. And you know from the start it can't be that bad -
under the hood, SeaMonkey is based on the same Mozilla source code which
powers such things as Firefox, Thunderbird, Camino, Sunbird and Miro. The
similarities of SeaMonkey with Firefox are obvious from the start and with
good reason. SeaMonkey 2.0 has been refurbished with a modern version of
Firefox based on Firefox 3.5.4 and is now much closer to Firefox as far as
user profiles, add-ons, and functionality of user interface elements are
concerned. Tabs in SeaMonkey can now be reopened after they have been closed
and the way passwords and usernames are handled has been overhauled. To
select another part of the suite you want to use, just go to the 'Window'
option in the Menu Bar and select either Browser, Mail and Newsgroups,
Address Book, IRC Chat and Composer. There are several other major
improvements in SeaMonkey related to the mail client. Setting up an account
is easy and retrieving e-mail using the IMAP (Internet Message Access
Protocol) protocol is now faster and mail is synchronized by default by your
computer. And at long last, email accounts, folders, and messages can be
viewed in tabs. On the downside, in terms of looks, SeaMonkey hasn't changed
an awful lot despite the release of Windows 7. The IRC chat client still
looks very basic, techy and intimidating too. Also, some people feel that the
new SeaMonkey has moved too far away from it's original Netscape origins in
look, functionality and feel. Finally, there seems there is no basic import
function to import passwords from earlier versions of Seamonkey or even
Firefox, which is a bit annoying. *SeaMonkey will still probably still only
appeal to those that have used it from version 1.0 but there's no doubt that
this latest release makes it a much more competitive web suite.*Download
*SeaMonkey 2.4.1* in Softonic