- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
Planned work for the 2024 release of Thunderbird.: https://developer.thunderbird.net/planning/roadmap
Planned work for the 2024 release of Thunderbird.: https://developer.thunderbird.net/planning/roadmap
I’m ignorant. What does native exchange support mean? I know we can get outlook/hotmail etc but is this more of the enterprise support?
Here is my understanding of it -
Currently, TB uses POP3/IMAP protocol to access your Mailbox on Exchange Server.
Ideally, it should be done via MS EWS Web API [1][2] which TB currently doesn’t support, but MS Office Outlook does.
Given that MS Exchange is heavily used in corporate/company setup, it[3] will put TB on par with Outlook in that regard.
[1] https://www.techtarget.com/searchwindowsserver/definition/Exchange-Web-Services-EWS
[2] https://www.envisionup.com/blog/pop3-imap-microsoft-exchange-email-platform-use/
[3] https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1847846
Just to add, consumer outlook / live / hotmail also benefits from this since it is also using Exchange in backend.
Additionally EWS is atually deprecated and planned to be closed on 2026 October for at least commercial customers (unclear from that article if free Outlook accounts also will be affected) although as with all MS announcements it will probably be prolonged. Microsoft Graph API is the new hot thing, but it seems some EWS features are not yet available in Graph API based on comments.
Another thing that in a proper company setting that uses Exchange Online (M365 / Cloud) you must approve applications before they can be used to access data for both EWS (in the past it was different, but now Oauth must be used) and Graph API so company administrator will have to approve Thunderbird which many will not allow.
Microsoft’s email service isn’t really following standards like IMAP/POP anymore and this breaks many apps. So they need to add support for their custom alternative system.