All those things are possible in Opera too: Where a new tab opens is an option you can set in the preferences. At the end of the row is default, but with on check box you set it to next to active tab. Also Opera takes up less space on disk, loads faster and navigates faster than IE, and it doesn't have all those security vulnerabilities that IE has.
I just switched to Opera's mail client, M2, and it's fabulous. It's not the most intuitive interface, it did take a little fiddling to work out how it works, and how to make it work best for me, but now that I have it working I find it takes me far, far less time to organise my mail than ever before. I imported a couple of tens of thousands of messages yesterday (probably about 30000, yes, I counted the zeroes, that number is correct) and I have less than a thousand messages left unsorted (930, to be precise). That's 30 *thousand* messages sorted neatly into folders and virtual views in *one* evening.
So take this as another recommendation: If you're willing to take the time out, read a getting started guide or two, import some backed-up mailboxes and play around to get to know it, it *rocks*.
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Date: September 28th, 2004 04:38 pm (UTC)I just switched to Opera's mail client, M2, and it's fabulous. It's not the most intuitive interface, it did take a little fiddling to work out how it works, and how to make it work best for me, but now that I have it working I find it takes me far, far less time to organise my mail than ever before. I imported a couple of tens of thousands of messages yesterday (probably about 30000, yes, I counted the zeroes, that number is correct) and I have less than a thousand messages left unsorted (930, to be precise). That's 30 *thousand* messages sorted neatly into folders and virtual views in *one* evening.
So take this as another recommendation: If you're willing to take the time out, read a getting started guide or two, import some backed-up mailboxes and play around to get to know it, it *rocks*.