Configuring Thunderbird
Setting up the Mozilla Thunderbird Email Client
Older instructions
Prior to 2024-6-19 (??date may need changing), instructions for setting up Thunderbird were in an HTML web page https://www.ncf.ca/ncf/support/mail_thunderbird3.html. This page dealt with a single email provider and none of the additional features of Thunderbird. It is also possible that the recommended settings may be sub-optimal or not work.
What you will need to know
While some of the following information may be gathered by Thunderbird itself as we set it up for a particular NCF member, it is useful to have it saved somewhere safe for reference and security. The list of information has been mentioned already in the Email (currently draft??) page. You may also want to know the URL (i.e., address) of your Calendar. If you are going to use your NCF Zimbra Calendar, then you will want the ICS URL that you can find using the following steps:
- Log into your NCF account with a web browser.
- Choose Email (i.e., Zimbra)
- Select Calendar
- Click the small downward pointing triangle next to the Calendar. This will open up a menu box.
- Choose Share Calendar from the menu. This will open a dialog for sharing your calendar
with other users, but we just want the ICS URL at the bottom.
The ICS URL for NCF member zz999 will be
https://mail.ncf.ca/home/zz999@ncf.ca/Calendar.ics
You can generally copy the text of the URL by Right-Click on it, so it is easy to paste into the Calendar settings of Thunderbird or into a file where this information will be saved.
Downloading and Installing Thunderbird
Installers for Thunderbird can be found and downloaded from https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/download/
Notes:
- Windows users have a choice of 64 bit exe, 64 bit msi and 32 bit exe files. Mostly the default suggested should work, but some older versions of Windows may need a particular choice.
- Windows may object to running the installer. If so, you will need to set the "Choose where to get apps" in the "Apps and Features" section of the Control panel (i.e., settings) for your installation of Windows. A workable choice is "Anywhere, but warn me ...". Microsoft tries hard to get you to use their software, and sometimes to pay for it too.
- Linux users may find Thunderbird is already installed with their distribution. Most common Linux distros include Thunderbird automatically. If not, they almost always have a way to install it via the distribution's package installer e.g., the apt tool for Debian/Ubuntu/Mint families, or yum for Red Hat/SUSE and related distros. Using the download page is generally a poor alternative, since the installers arrange for automatic updates which improve security and fix bugs.
Install Thunderbird either by running the downloaded installer or via your operating system's package manager.
Basic Thunderbird Configuration
Thunderbird is a large and busy application. We will not cover all possibilities here.
- Launch Thunderbird if it does not do so automatically after installation.
- Generally Thunderbird will ask for information to set up email.
- If Thunderbird does not start the Add Mail Account setup process, go to Account Settings. Unfortunately, this may not be in a standard location. On Windows version 115.12.1 (64-bit) this is found under Tools, but you may need to press the F10 key to get the File Edit View Go Message Events_and_Tasks Tools Help menu displayed. On Linux version 115.12.0 (64-bit) the Account Settings are under Edit. Choose Account Actions, then Add Mail Account. You may also access Account Settings from the "Settings" icon that generally appears near the lower left of the Thunderbird window.
- A dialog box will appear wanting
- your full name. This can be any name. It is what gets displayed as the sender of messages to your message recipients
- Email address. This should be your NCF account e.g., zz999@ncf.ca where zz999 is your account name.
- Password: the password you use to log into the NCF start page. Watch that the Caps Lock is NOT set. Type carefully.
- A check box to "Remember Password" can be checked. This saves entering the password each time you look at your email.
- Click "Continue". Thunderbird will try to connect to NCF and determine appropriate settings for the incoming and outgoing mail servers. For NCF both are mail.ncf.ca but the ports are different.
- The incoming server defaults to port 143 using STARTTLS connection security and Normal Password authentication using IMAP server type.
- The outgoing server defaults to port 587 with the same connection and authentication using SMTP protocol.
Generally, Thunderbird should now be able to send and receive email. If you have another email, or a friend willing to help, send a short test message and ask for a reply to test that the email is working.
Adding a Calendar
Adding Feeds etc.
Use the instructions under Basic Thunderbird Configuration to access Account Settings. From this, under Account Actions you can access the dialogs for adding feeds etc.
Adding another email
You can add another email from Account Settings / Account Actions in the same manner as the initial email. The accounts will both appear in the sidebar of Thunderbird. However, if you then look at Account Settings you will see both accounts but also a separate line Outgoing Server (SMTP). Clicking on that line will show "Outgoing Server (SMTP) Settings" and usually the servers for both email identities will appear, but one will be the default. You can change this if you wish. When replying to a message, the outgoing server for the email address that received the message will be used. The "default" is only used when you click on a "mailto:" link or perform some similar action where the account is not specified.