Releases and what code is included in a release the release engineer of Its responsibilities include release management (deciding when to cut The SeaMonkey Council is the project leading team. The SeaMonkey Association provides legal backing for Gaining (and contributing) new features and the ongoing security updates which SeaMonkey benefits from the cross-fertilization with these other projects, by Underlies the highly successful Thunderbird and is the base for the Firefox browser. Mozilla Gecko engine, the same code which Internet browser, email & newsgroup client, HTML editor, IRC chat and webĭevelopment tools, SeaMonkey is sure to appeal to advanced users, web Such a software suite was previously made popular by Netscape and Mozilla,Īnd the SeaMonkey project continues to develop and deliver high-quality updatesĪs well as new features and improvements to this concept. I gave up after a couple of weeks.The SeaMonkey project is a community effort to develop the SeaMonkey It's been a while since I implemented that, the only problem I had ran into since was that the Google Contacts TB add-on is marked by Google as a "bad actor" and subsequently I can't get my Contacts list to get updated in TB anylonger.Įven my Google-One subscription was useless, went through multiple agents who all claimed to understand the issue but only continued to "kick the can down the road" to another agent. Overall I find the Google way of presenting things to be somewhat too-fuzzy, perhaps being an IT person by profession I prefer to see things clearly defined in a config-type setup where various options can be either turned ON or OFF.alas, that's not what the world wants!! lolĪnyways, I thought I'd just toss that out there to paint a fuller picture of what I'm currently using. in your Google account you have the option to flag a particular app, or create a generic "email app", that basically tells Google "it's OK if this app accesses my data", you can find this under the "Data & privacy => Apps with access to your account" section this is th process Dave highlighted earlier on So here is something else to consider, I do actually have BOTH of these implemented so it may very well be that the combination of the two allow my TB to work quite fine: I am not big on using GMail so no problem letting it go if necessary, but this is happening at a most inconvenient time for me, and obeying Murphy's Law the 'cutoff' on the 30th will of course happen while I am on the go.Īm I missing something? Is there some way to use OAuth 2.0 to login to gmail accounts from OS/2 SM / TB? (or I can't find it in the menus under email and news preferences), which in turn I take to mean no more GMail from OS/2. To the best of my knowledge, the latest SeaMonkey we have available (2.42.9esr 20200322125440) does not support OAuth 2.0. Somewhere else, I read how to setup gmail accounts to use OAuth 2.0 under Mail Preferences in ThunderBird, and that it just worked, so I forgot about the issue until I actually tried to do the same recently on SeaMonkey on OS/2. Switch to Office 365, Outlook 2019 (or a newer version), or another email software in which you can login through "Sign in with Google". Instead, you will have to login via "Sign in with Google" or other more secure technologies, like OAuth 2.0.Į-mail software, like Outlook 2016 or previous versions, accesses your Gmail account through less secure means. To protect your account, Google will not allow to use applications or third-party devices that ask you to login to your Google account using only your user name and password. On May 30th, you may lose access to applications that use a less secure login technology.
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