Email a list of addresses from an Excel spreadsheet using Thunderbird ‹ Folder Views in Thunderbird up Reading Email in Thunderbird › By default, Thunderbird enables mail notification pop-ups that contain information such as the subject, sender and message preview text of new messages as they arrive. Either way, the image is attached. In any decent e-mail client, you can save either kind of image to the hard drive easily. In the case of an inline image, just drag it to the desktop, or control-click it (right-click on Windows) and choose to save it somewhere. Outlook has weird issues with e-mail, as Barney has pointed out.
When you double-click on an attachment listed in the Attachments pane in Thunderbird, a dialog will open asking 'What should Thunderbird do with this file?' The choices will be: • Open with: default application for handling this file type, or some other application • Save to Disk • Do this automatically for files like this from now on. [optional, for one of the two above choices] If you select the 'Do this automatically for files like this from now on' checkbox, Thunderbird will remember the action you chose for the specified file type (such as JPG image files), so that the dialog will be bypassed for future attachments of this file type in the future.
Full Specifications What's new in version 11.6.6 This update improves security. General Publisher Publisher web site Release Date December 14, 2011 Date Added December 14, 2011 Version 11.6.6 Category Category Subcategory Operating Systems Operating Systems Mac OS X 10.2/10.3/10.3.9/10.4/10.4 PPC/10.5/10.5 PPC/10.6/10.7 Additional Requirements None Download Information File Size 16.41MB File Name Office2004-1166UpdateEN.dmg Popularity Total Downloads 316,562 Downloads Last Week 113 Pricing License Model Purchase Limitations Not available Price Paid.
It includes fixes for vulnerabilities that an attacker can use to overwrite the contents of your computer's memory with malicious code.

The has free viewers for most Office file types. If you can't find a utility to open an attachment with a specific file type on your favorite shareware/download site try. [] 'Download Actions' settings Despite what the labelling in this panel might suggest (it says 'Thunderbird can automatically save or open attachments of certain types'), these settings simply allow you to change the save/open actions that will be performed when you double-click on an attachment of a specified file type. Changing these settings will not allow save/open actions to be performed automatically for attachments in incoming messages without user intervention.
For instance, if you previously used the 'Do this automatically for files like this from now on' checkbox to have Thunderbird always open '.doc' attachments with Word, you can undo that file-handling association by clicking on the 'DOC' file type and clicking the 'Remove Action' button. To add a download action to this list, open an e-mail that has an attachment of the type you want to add, or write a new e-mail and attach a file of the type that you want to add. Open the attachment and choose how you want Thunderbird to open it. Check the box 'Do this automatically for files like this from now on'. The extension adds a Tools -> MIME Edit -> Edit menu command that does everything (except for searching) that the download actions window does, plus it lets you create a entry. It can be very useful if you get a bad setting due to opening an attachment that has the wrong MIME type definition, acknowledged 'do this from now on for all attachments of that type' and it replaced the good entry with a bad entry. [] Unexpected handling of certain attachments Some mail programs send attachments with the wrong content type.