Apparently, though unproven, at 23:59 on Saturday 04 June 2011, Indi did opine 
thusly:

> On Sat, Jun 04, 2011 at 11:44:30PM +0200, Sebastian Beßler wrote:
> > Am 04.06.2011 23:10, schrieb Indi:
> > > Every single GUI MUA I ever tried would lock up and become unresponsive
> > > at times when dealing with IMAP.
> > 
> > I use Thunderbird and IMAP for 3 years now and in all that time became
> > TB never unresponsive. So this point seems to have improved since your
> > testing.
> 
> That's good to know, thanks.
> I'm unlikely to switch from mutt (due in part to so many macros and
> customizations accumulated the last couple of years), but am always
> keeping an eye out for those I support.
> 
> Maybe I'll put the next person who complains about evolution on
> thunderbird and see how they do with it...

Evolution just sucks, all the time. The only feature that sets is apart is the 
Exchange support, and it's precisely that which crashes is. We enabled 
POP/IMAP on Exchange and non-Outlook users use that.

Thunderbird - I itried this a while back when KMail-4.5.9999 pissed me off 
extremely. Capable enough except it does something weird with it's internal 
indexing - shows there's mail in folder, click the folder and it decides there 
isn't mail after all. S simple this, but a deal-breaking annoying one.

Mutt - my networks guys use this on a dedicated mail server just for them 
(networks guys really are special) and they have no issues at all. 2 of them 
are hard-core crazy and choose pine instead. The only problem with pine is 
finding who is supported and maintaining it lately (as repine)

Claws is fast, very fast. I didn't like the way it dealt with mail accounts 
and enable/disable them quickly and easily.

KMail was always the best of the lot for me. It read and composed mail, it had 
all the features of a pine/mutt and shows it in a GUI. No weird bling-bling 
(it *could* do HTML mail but you had to jump through a hoop first) and made 
sensible use of the extra screen space and all the information that could be 
shown. But in the last year, I don't know so much anymore. KDEPIM has a 
"corporate sponsor" which I take to mean "works like Outlook". It's two whole 
minor releases behind KDE and they don't have a incremental feature set they 
can release for the interim. And then there's that text-search aspect that 
kills Akonadi.

I see room for a KDEPIM fork from the 4.4 codebase in maintenance mode that 
does not add deep features.

-- 
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com

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